FREE Pattern: Wine Cozy

As promised, here is the first of the free patterns I am offering to help spruce up your home for the holidays. Just imagine you have guests over, and everyone has a wine glass, but keeping track of those glasses and running around with coasters for every flat surface is a problem.  The wine cozy is an attractive and fun way solution to both situations.  You’ll want to make it in a variety of colors and fabric patterns – to help guests identify their own drink.  The best part?  You probably have enough different fabrics in your stash to make dozens of these!

Materials – note: these instructions are to make ONE cozy

  • 5″ strip of cotton print or solid fabric – or 1 fat quarter
  • 4″ square of thin cotton batting

Suggested Tools

  • (beyond standard sewing supplies)
  • Circle Cutter (I used the OLFA cutter)
  • Self Healing Mat

Project Level: Beginner

Cut fabric as follows:

  • Cotton Print: cut 4 circles with a 4″ diameter
  • Cotton Batting: cut 1 circles with a 3½” diameter

Construction –

  1. Sandwich the batting circle between two of the fabric circles with right sides facing out on fabric circles (so bottom fabric is right side down, then batting, then top fabric with right side up).
  2. Take remaining two circles and fold in half, ironing the fold sharply.
  3. Lay folded circles on top of the sandwich, with the folded edges touching so the two half circles (folded circles) make a whole circle on top of the fabric sandwich. This area with the fold is where the foot of the wine glass will insert. 
  4. Pin all layers together, making sure you catch each of the folded pieces separately.
  5. Stitch around the sandwich, catching all layers of the fabric (bottom piece, batting, top piece and each of the folded pieces) into a ¼” seam.
  6. Clip the selvage, allowing you to more easily turn the circle out.
  7. Using the opening at center of the circle (folds) turning it right side out. Iron cozy flat.
  8. To use, insert the base of your wine goblet. Create a variety of cozys out of different fabrics – now everyone will know which glass is theirs.

Here is a downloadable PDF version of this pattern: Wine Cozy Pattern
Sheila Reinke, Heart of Sewing
Sheila

Free Pattern: Quick Pillowcases

Halloween is always a fun time of year for kids, eagerly anticipating dressing up and going out to collect all their candy loot. Well, these pillowcases are a great way to add to the excitement! They make up quickly and are a great beginner project.

2 yards of cotton prints will create two pillowcases – as you’ll see in my instructions you’ll reverse the use of prints, so make sure they are both interesting to look at as each print will be the ‘main’ fabric in one of the pillowcases.

I used to give my kids pillowcases to take with them for their trick-or-treating, because they were easier to hold on to than the store-made pumpkins and didn’t tear like a bag might. I wish I had come up with this idea sooner – the pillowcases I’ve made this year will be for my grandkids to sleep on when they visit grandma and grandpa, to dream of the treats they’ll gather on their trick-or-treating.

Materials

  • 1 yard – cotton fabric (45” cotton)
  • 1 yard – coordinating cotton fabric (45” cotton)
  • 4” strip of accent fabric (45” cotton)

Cut fabric as follows

  • Cut main fabric into two pieces, one ¾ yard and one ¼ yard
  • Cut coordinate fabric into two pieces, one ¾ yard and one ¼ yard
  • Cut accent fabric into two strips, each 1½” to 2” wide
  • Set aside the main fabric ¼ yard piece, the coordinate ¾ yard piece and one accent fabric strip.
  • Note – these instructions will allow you to make two pillow cases, one the inverse of the other.

Construction

  • Fold and iron a strip of accent fabric in half lengthwise, right side out. Make sure you create a good crease.
  • Build your ‘fabric sandwich’ as follows, with RIGHT sides up and top edges lined up along the 45” width.
    • Coordinate fabric (¼ yd pc) on bottom
    • Main fabric (¾ yd pc)
    • Folded accent fabric on top
Fabrics in sandwich
Fabrics in ‘sandwich’
  • Starting at the bottom, roll the main fabric loosely up toward the top of the fabric sandwich. When you reach the ¼ yard of coordinate fabric, leave it out of your fabric roll. Continue rolling until you reach the center (approximately) of the coordinate fabric.
  • Fold your main fabric over the roll, and line the edges up at the top. You will now have five raw edges at the top of your bundle, with the main fabric roll in the center. Note – one edge of the main fabric is trapped in the fabric roll

View One of Fabric Roll

  • Pin this fabric bundle together. Beginners may want to use quilter’s safety pins because sewing through this many layers of fabric without having them shift is not easy. Make sure you only catch the one edge of the main fabric in the seam you are about to stitch.

View 2 of Fabric Roll

  • Using a walking foot (due to the many layers of fabric), sew through the five layers of fabric as outlined above using a ¼” seam allowance. Beginners may use a ½” seam allowance, but be aware that this will make your accent fabric strip very small.
  • Turn right side out – magically that one seam has finished both the inside and the outside of the pillowcase cuff, and the accent fabric at the edge of the cuff.

  • Fold pillowcase with right sides together, use your rotary cutter to trim up the edge of the cuff and remove selvages. Pin the pillowcase together, so you don’t get any shifting of the cuff or accent fabric line while stitching, and finish pillow by sewing the side and end of the pillow.
  • Repeat construction steps using the fabric laid aside to create the inverse pillow.

Of course, pillowcases are a good project any time of year – I just made these with Halloween themed fabrics because it’s that time of year. But with a pattern this easy, you could have pillowcases for a child’s favorite cartoon character, or for a guest room you could change the cases on those ‘extra’ pillows to suit the season.  As I said above, this is a great project for beginners, so perhaps your child could help with sewing the pillowcase.  The possibilities are endless!
Sheila Reinke, Heart of Sewing
Sheila