Behold the Woozy Waggie.
Oops.
Ha ha. Along with Scotty is the woeful Scottie, who looks like she's about to
be scolded for barfing on the satin bedspread again.
I did not name it. I did agree to make it.
"You can sew, right?"
Right.
"How hard would it be to make a stuffed animal? I
have the pattern (wheedle, wheedle, wheedle)."
Well, let's see. Does it have bound buttonholes? Neck facings?
Flat-felled seams? An undercollar, two-piece sleeves, a gusset?
I didn't think so. Sure, send it along.
The pattern arrives. I spend 10 minutes staring at the
pattern-cum-instruction sheet, wondering how in God's green earth this is all
going to come together. How do these weirdly-shaped hind leg and fore leg
pieces become the slab-like paw structure? Are the round sole pieces simply
decorative patches? Why does the face look so small? Why don't I simply turn
the page over and realize I'm looking at two different patterns?
Now it makes more sense. Still, though, these aren't
instructions from the Big 4. "Join J of rear feet to J of rear legs, then K of rear feet to K of body, then L of rear feet to L
of under body..."
No diagrams, no illustrations.
I think it's best to cull the scrap pile for Scotty.
And yet, how hard can it be? It's a child's toy, a stuffed
dog. I taught myself to build cabinets based on the laughable notion that
making cupboards isn't much different from making a blouse (measure, cut,
construct). If I can make drawers — nice drawers! — I can make Scotty.
Sure can.
1 comment:
You;ll do great I know! I want the next one!
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