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The Sew in Style Book Tour, Giveaway & a Dolly Tardis Dress!

Posted on July 25, 2014 by Bonnie

My youngest daughter and I get to share a new book with you today, and it’s a great one for those of you who have girls learning to sew! Samantha and I met Erin Hentzel at Spring Quilt Market in Pittsburgh while we were setting up our booth, and we enjoyed chatting with her about sewing and the sewing industry and her newly released book!Sew in Style – Make Your Own Doll Clothes was written to teach girls to sew for their own 18″ dolls, and it does a beautiful job of doing just that. At 16, Samantha is probably a little older than the target audience, but she gladly pulled her well-loved American Girl Samantha Doll out of storage and started planning as soon as she saw the book. (Her Samantha Doll is not making an appearance here because when I say “well loved” I mean she looks like she slept with a little girl who loved her very much for many, many years! Instead, we opened up an AG Doll that we picked up on sale a few years ago and kept for some special little girl that we have yet to meet. Is that a little odd? I just know that we’ll meet someone someday who will just be overjoyed with this doll.) C&T Publishing sent us an eBook copy of the book for this review. This was my first time using one of their eBooks, and I really appreciated the layout. It’s super easy to find what you need, and all of the full-size patterns are included in easy-to-print-and-tape-together format. Samantha scrolled through the book on the computer, and then we printed just the pages she needed.My favorite thing about this book is that I just handed it all over to Samantha and let her go with it. The beginning of the book teaches basic sewing skills with plenty of tips and guidance. Really, the only thing I helped with was brainstorming how to turn the book’s Party Dress into a Tardis Party Dress!Things have been a little bit Doctor Who crazy around here lately. We started watching the Doctor a few months ago as a family, and I feel like I’m raising a houseful of Whovians at the moment. My two little guys run around the house now battling invisible Daleks and opening things with imaginary sonic screwdrivers, and my teenagers amuse themselves by turning pieces of furniture into police boxes:


Samantha’s idea for designing a dolly Tardis dress did not surprise me at all!To make this dress, Samantha chose the closest-to-Tardis blue Kona cotton that she could find and black ribbon. She used a white paint pen to inscribe the words “Police Public Call Box” on the ribbon, and she used Wonder Under to iron on the white window patches. I think it turned out really well! What do you think? (We even think that if this particular doll had red hair, she could pass as Amy Pond, and the irony of this whole thing is amusing since Doctor Who is a British series and this is an American Girl Doll.)Giveaway is closed! And the winner is lucky #13! Comment #13 was from Heidi K! Congratulations!

Do you know a little girl who would enjoy sewing clothes for her own doll? Well, C&T Publishing is letting me give away an eBook copy of Sew in Style to one of my lucky readers! Just leave a comment here to be entered. If you would like a question to answer, tell me how old you were when you first started sewing!

Giveaway ends July 27th, 2014 at 8:00 PM EST. Giveaway is open to U.S and international residents who are 18 years of age or older. One entry per person. Winner will be selected by Random.org. Winner will be announced using the winner’s public username on or before 12:00 PM EST on August 1st, 2014. Prize will be emailed to the winner who must be contactable via email. Email addresses will never be shared.

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24 thoughts on “The Sew in Style Book Tour, Giveaway & a Dolly Tardis Dress!”

  1. Emily says:
    July 25, 2014 at 3:15 pm

    I was 10.

    Reply
  2. Linda Marquis Cate says:
    July 25, 2014 at 3:21 pm

    I probably started sewing with just a needle and thread around 6. I’m now working with my 9-year-old granddaughter on a REAL sewing machine – that’s a treat!

    Reply
  3. JoDee says:
    July 25, 2014 at 3:36 pm

    My daughters would love this book! Thanks for the chance to win! I started sewing when I was 22. 😉 I started sewing cloth diapers for my third child.

    Reply
  4. Melissa A. says:
    July 25, 2014 at 3:51 pm

    I first started sewing when I was about 13 years old 🙂

    Reply
  5. Tania says:
    July 25, 2014 at 3:53 pm

    I was 5 and would sneak onto my mom’s sewing machine to sew my Barbie clothes 🙂 my girls would love this book!

    Reply
  6. Marie-Aude says:
    July 25, 2014 at 4:08 pm

    I started sewing around 10, but my first real big projects were around 25 yo, when pregnant with my first baby.

    Reply
  7. Sue Gray says:
    July 25, 2014 at 4:25 pm

    I started sewing when I was 6 making doll clothes. I wasn’t satisfied with just that so my Mom started me sewing my own clothes. Soon I was old enough to be in 4-H & entered the Fairs with Sewing Items I made. Won many, many ribbons in all catagories, cups with my name engraved on them, Savings Bonds & a trip to Nationals in Washington DC for the big contest & took top honors there. Have my daughters & Grandaughters sewing also !! Have a Grandaughter who would love this book !!

    Reply
  8. JudyB says:
    July 25, 2014 at 5:11 pm

    [Yeah, I know my website above is not a sewing website, but it’s currently the only one I’m managing. I keep trying to get to work on the Grandmothering Project site I created, but have not found spare time yet. That one will be include a sewing section.]

    I started sewing when I was in junior high school and took home economics. My mother would not teach me how to sew because she wanted me to “learn correctly,” so I had to wait. Once I gained the basics in home-ec (no longer an option in most USA schools) I started to fly. I made skirts to wear to concerts and eventually moved on when I had my own children to sew most of their clothing. In those days, the only “new” clothing they got was purchased by their grandparents since we were quite “poor,” but I could sew using remnants and make adorable outfits for my two first-born kids. I even taught myself how to sew a tailored blazer for my son (classic camel, wool) and made a lovely red jacket and skirt suit for my daughter one Christmas that included a brave and successful attempt at adding piping.

    Mostly, I am self-taught since I moved on from the grade 7 class to take sewing classes in grade 8 and in high school and continued to pursue my passion on my own, even making a wedding dress in 1971!

    Flash Forward: More recently, I re-launched my passion for sewing for my grandchildren and make clothing for them including skirts, pants, shorts, jammies, and for the girls, matching clothing for their dollies. Some of the Halloween costumes ended up being exceptionally complicated like the witch costume I made using a vintage costume pattern that provided bad instructions, and involved linings and multiple layers of fabric! (Still, sewing the dolly clothing is a favorite way for me to learn, and to share with my grandchildren about sewing. These smaller projects are instructive and help me re-learn what I might have forgotten or to even learn new techniques.)

    I’ve also made three quilt tops, but ended up storing them for years until I found a person with a long-arm machine to assist by sandwiching and finishing the quilts.

    I love Fishsticks and have many of the patterns and love the great instructions and results! These are FAR superior to any big-pattern company tissue designs in both the instructions (very step-by-step and full of clarity and photos) and in the end results.

    Blessings on all the good work you do and thanks for all the “freebies” you share in your generous spirit as a sewist!

    Reply
  9. Pamella says:
    July 25, 2014 at 7:08 pm

    I didn’t start sewing until I was 29, after my daughter was born, and I’ve been sewing madly ever since!!!

    Reply
  10. Susan says:
    July 25, 2014 at 8:33 pm

    This book looks great! I wonder how difficult it would be to alter the patterns to fit Build-A-Bear animals. Hmmm…

    I was probably six when my mom started me out with a needle and thread. Then around eight she taught me how to make pillows using her sewing machine. I loved it so much, I filled the whole house with pillows until I learned how to make something else! Mom still has a few of the pillows in her linen closet.

    Reply
  11. Alison says:
    July 25, 2014 at 8:34 pm

    Looks like a cute book!

    Reply
  12. Mhairi says:
    July 26, 2014 at 11:40 am

    I was 8 when I first started sewing and I still love to sew now. I would love to show my children how to sew and create clothes for her dolls. My 4 year old loves to sew but I would love to be able to help her more.

    Reply
  13. Heidi K says:
    July 26, 2014 at 3:32 pm

    Cute dress! Great job.

    Reply
  14. Judith Martinez says:
    July 27, 2014 at 2:09 am

    I started sewing when I was 12. I haven’t done a great job at passing on my skills to my children but I’ve let them use my machine and the older girls have figured a lot out on their own.

    Reply
  15. Rebecca says:
    July 28, 2014 at 2:43 am

    I started sewing when I was 13. This would be a fantastic book for my 11 and 9 year old daughters!

    Reply
  16. Andrea says:
    July 28, 2014 at 3:05 am

    I started sewing when I was 9 or 10

    Reply
  17. Leslee Parish says:
    July 29, 2014 at 1:44 pm

    My grandma taught me how to sew using single socks and turning them into dolls. I was 8. My niece is 9, I’d love to work through this book with her! She just got her American girl doll for a gift last Christmas. I’m sure she’d love this!

    Reply
  18. Mary H. says:
    August 2, 2014 at 4:44 pm

    I think I was around 9 when I started using my mom’s sewing machine. But I can remember sewing clothes for my Gerber baby by hand when I was in first or second grade. I am mainly a quilter now, but I still love making doll clothes.

    Reply
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