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Anticipated crafting time for this project: 4-5 Hours
This quiet book is recommended for children ages 4-8.
Warning – This book contains small parts that may present a choking hazard for children under the age of 3.
The “My Life Skills Book” includes instructions to make the following pages:
• A front cover for the book
• A “Help Tell The Time On The Clock” page, with 2 snap on, movable clock hands.
• A zippered jacket page, with a zip up pocket.
• A “Help Fasten The Belt” page with a “D” ring belt that can be fastened and unfastened or a small cat collar belt.
• A “Help Button The Sweater” page, with two buttons to button the flap closed.
• A “Help Tie The Shoe” page, with single laced shoe that the lace can be tied in a bow.
• An “Add Money To The Piggy Bank” page, with a piggy bank pocket, made for plastic coins that can be strung on a string, and a “pocket” envelope.
Supplies Needed:
• Printed fabric for the pages and pieces (Available for purchase through Spoonflower – I would suggest printing it on the cotton canvas fabric for best durability)
• Iron on fixative lining (to work as adhesives to attach the smaller pieces to the felt)
• Felt Lining (to reinforce the smaller pieces)
• Elastic
• 3 Buttons
• 2 Sewable Snaps
• Four Plastic Coins (I suggest drilling a small hole in these)
• Elastic Threading
• 2 Metal “D” Rings and woven cording, or a small belt or cat collar
• A small Zipper. Big enough to fit the page.
• A Shoe Lace
• A Sewing Machine (Can also be hand sewn)
• A Needle
• Thread
• Sewing Pins
• Scissors
•Candle & Matches
• An Iron
• An Ironing Board or Ironing Surface
*Note* A few minor design updates may have been made to the fabric & movable pieces for better usability.
Step One:
Iron the printed fabric. Then take it and and cut out the 4 large rectangular pages of the book, each section should have two pages still attached in the middle, and when they are cut out they should look like the image to the right.
Put pages aside.
Step Two:
Take the leftover fabric with the various smaller pieces for the quiet book and cut out only the large pieces for the yellow jacket (make sure to leave the white space between the two yellow pieces as you’ll need it to sew in the zipper later). Put the yellow jacket pieces aside before continuing with the next instructions.
DO NOT CUT OUT the smaller individual pieces.
Follow the instructions on the fixative lining to attach the smaller pieces to the felt.
Start by taking the fabric with the smaller quiet book pieces and cut the iron on fixative lining and the felt to match the size and shape of the fabric.
Next layer the fabric. Your felt piece should be on the bottom, the fixative lining should be in the middle and the printed canvas fabric with the smaller pieces should be on top (sandwich style).
(You may want a disposable cloth, or bit a excess fabric for this part as any overhang of the iron on fixative will be sticky and will gunk up your iron or ironing board if they touch.)
Set your iron to a medium setting and press it to the canvas fabric holding it for three seconds before removing and pressing the next section. Continue until the canvas, fixative, and felt have been fused together. When finished ironing with the canvas side up, flip the piece over and iron it again with the felt side up. (again you may want to use a cloth on this part to save your fabric and your iron if you have any overhang).
Step Three:
Take the fabric with the various quiet book pieces to your sewing machine and sew around each individual piece (you will only need to sew around the top curved part of the pig. You’ll sew around the rest of the pig when you are attaching it to your page.) Keep your thread just barely inside the lines of each design.
When finished cut out all the pieces.
Step Four:
(Note: Make sure you sew the correct or snappable side of the snap facing out – test with the other half of the snap to see if they fit together if you are unsure which side is correct).
Step Five:
Take the other side of the snap from step four and hand sew one of the backings onto the dot in the middle of the clock on the page titled “Help Tell The Time On The Clock”.
(Note: Make sure you sew the correct or snappable side of the snap facing out – test with the other half of the snap to see if they fit together if you are unsure which side is correct).
Step Six:
You should have one left over snap piece. Hand sew it to the front (or pink part) of the larger sized teardrop shaped clock hand.
(Again make sure you are sewing the correct side face out) This should allow the hands to snap together in a stack on the clock, and turn as desired.
Step Seven: (OPTIONAL)
Thread the coins with the drilled holes onto the small piece of elastic. Knot the two ends of the elastic together and pin or clip them over the gray envelope outline with the string hanging over the left side of the envelope. The string will be sewn into place when the envelope is sewn onto the page.
Step Eight:
Take the pig cutout and align it with the printed pig on the page. Pin in place and sew around the body of the pig leaving the hole at the top of the pig unsewn so that the coins can be slipped inside.
Take the gray envelope piece and line it up with the printed gray envelope on the same page. Pin in place and sew around the left, bottom, and right side of the envelope, leaving the top unsewn to create a pocket for the piggy bank coins, and sewing the coin string into place.
Put the page aside when finished.
Step Nine:
Next line up your zipper so the top part of the zipper sits just barely above the top part of the fabric.
Take the left side of the yellow jacket and fold it over, so the white (back) part of the fabric is facing up and the rest of the fabric is covering the top of your zipper. Align the edge of the jacket piece you just folded over with the far edge of the zipper and pin into place.
Sew a straight line from the top of the jacket piece to the bottom, sewing the zipper into place.
Now fold back the piece of jacket you just sewed so the yellow side is facing up again and the zipper is visible. Fold the fabric so that the yellow of the jacket is close up against the side of the zipper with teeth and bend the fabric flat. (It might be helpful to iron it down).
Now with the colored side of the fabric facing up and your zipper facing up sew another strait line from the top of the jacket to the bottom sewing the zipper into place and making the jacket flap lay flat.
Repeat these steps for the other side of the jacket.
When finished zip the zipper closed and leave any excess zipper fabric hanging off the top and bottom of the square.
Step Ten:
Take your quiet book page with the yellow square on one side and the lace up shoe on the other side. Lay your zippered jacket over the lace up shoe page so the white side of the jacket is facing up and the printed side of the jacket is against the printed side of the shoe page.
Sew a line down the right side of your jacket flap, where it lays in the middle of the shoe/jacket page attaching the side of the yellow jacket piece to the center of the shoe/jacket page. When finished fold the jacket piece over so that the yellow of the jacket piece lays of over the top of the yellow page and the seam you just sewed is hidden. Pin the top, right and bottom of the yellow jacket into place over the yellow square making up the page so those edges can be sewn to the book when you sew the quiet book pages together.
Step Eleven:
When finished align the blue strips with the tennis shoe. The fatter blue piece should be on the left side of the shoe, with the dotted edge facing the middle of the shoe and the smooth edge against the left edge of the shoe, and vice versa for the right strip and right side of the shoe.
Pin the pieces into place and sew a line along the smooth, un-dotted portion of both of the blue strips.
Step Twelve:
Take your lace and, starting at the bottom of your shoe, lace up the shoe. If your holes are tight or small you might need to use a pair of scissors or a pencil tip to help poke the lace through the holes. When finished tie your shoe lace and set the page aside.
Step Thirteen:
Take the page with the jeans and the title “Help Fasten The Belt” and lay the two belt loop “extra pieces” over the belt loops on the page. Pin in place and sew the top and bottom of each belt loop piece to the page.
Step Fourteen:
Take you belt fabric and light your candle. Slowly move the edge of the belt fabric toward the lit candle, move it just enough to melt the edge of the cording so it won’t fray, but don’t touch it to the flame. If you are using a cat collar or other threading you might be able to skip this step.
Thread the belt fabric through one of the jean loops so that the “D” rings are about over the button on the jeans, and lay the rest of the belt fabric off the page. Cut the belt fabric so there is at least an inch of belted fabric overhanging the edge of the page. (You may want to use your candle again to melt the now frayable edges.)
When finished thread the belt through the jean loop and through both of the “D” rings, before bending it back and threading it through only the top “D” ring to secure in place.
Your belt piece is finished.
Step Fifteen:
Sew two buttonholes over the light gray lines on that “extra piece” of sweater fabric (Note: you buttonholes will likely be longer than the lines, they are just meant to be a guide).
Step Sixteen:
Pin into place so that the text “Help Button The Sweater” is still visible over to top of the piece, and you have about a one inch margin from the bottom of the page so the sweater flap doesn’t get sewn into the book when you sew the book pages together.
Hand sew the two provided buttons onto the “Help Button The Sweater” page over the gray lines, so that the buttons align with your buttonholes, and set the page aside.
Step Seventeen: (OPTIONAL)
Take the front cover of the book and sew a button onto the right side of the page against the side in the middle.
On the opposite side of the page, find the dot and pin the small loop of elastic there with the loop facing the print on the page and the edges of the elastic hanging off at the edge of the page.
Step Eighteen:
Make sure the money for the piggy bank is tucked inside the page and won’t be sewn when you sew around the page.
Starting at the bottom middle sew around the outside of the two pages, about a ⅜ inch from the edge, leave about a four inch gap in the bottom of the book from where you began your sewing to where you end it.
Step Nineteen:
Step Twenty:
Use the four inch gap you left in step eighteen and flip the page, so that the print side is out, taking special care to press out the corners of the page as much as possible. Iron your page flat.
Step Twenty-One:
Fold up the edges of your four inch gap, and pin them in place. Then sew around the outside of your book page (about ¼ inch from the edge) Start and end your sewing in the same place so that your four inch gap is sealed shut.
Step Twenty-Two:
Repeat steps eighteen through twenty-one for the other two pages of your quiet book. Make sure that the bottom edge of the gray sweater is up far enough that it won’t get sewn into the seam, and that the shoelace is tucked into the page so it doesn’t get sewn into the page as well. Also make sure that the excess pieces of both the zipper, and the belt are outside, so that they can get sewn into the book (clipped off the overhang for the zipper and (possibly) belt when finished sewing around your book).
Step Twenty-Three:
Line up the two sewn rectangular pages (that create the whole of your quiet book) and pin them in place so they completely overlap one another. Sew a straight line down the middle of your overlapped pages, securing the pages of the book together like binding.
Step Twenty-Four:
Re-add your clock hands to the clock, do up the fasteners in your book and congratulations, you are done! 🙂
Thank you so much for your purchase of this quiet book fabric, if you found any of these instructions to be unclear or difficult please email me at babymybookie@gmail.com I’d love to get them updated and clarified to the best of my ability.
Spot cleaning with a light detergent and a damp rag is the best way to clean your quiet book, but it should also hold up if you remove all the excess pieces from it and wash it in the washing machine on a gentle cycle. Air dry only.
Please let me know if you have any comments or additional questions.