|
| |

click here for a detailed view |
Eco-Friendly
Shopping Tote
by Lisa
Shepard Stewart
Stitch up some super-easy totes to carry your groceries
(or any other essentials) in eco-conscious style! Make various
sizes from grocery bag to city-chic magazine totes to cute
little lunch sacks, all in Oasis
Canvas, our certified organic cotton made with eco-friendly
dyes. Leave them plain, decorate with appliqués, or combine
your favorite Oasis colors by making the bags from color-blocked
fabric you piece together yourself.
Designer's Note: Though we created the bag
with our eco-friendly Oasis Canvas in mind, it sews up equally
nicely in Simply
Chic Décor canvas. For a designer touch, mix the
complementary colors of these two collections for a complete set
of bags. (For extra stability regardless of the fabric, apply a
woven fusible interfacing to the wrong side of the bag fabric
before you begin to sew; this will also act as a lining for the
bag.) |
You'll Need: |
1¼ yard
Oasis Canvas (for a grocery-sized bag approx. 12" wide x
7" deep x 17" high)
Optional: 1 to 1½ yards webbing for handles, or cut from bag
fabric.
Optional: 1 yard fusible woven interfacing (white or black,
45" wide)
Plastic canvas (or cut an old, used rotary cutting mat, as
suggested in our Green Quilting tips section!) |
Instructions: |
- Cut a piece of fabric measuring 39" wide x 42"
long. (If desired, cut woven fusible interfacing to the same
size, and apply to the wrong side of the entire piece.)
- Side seams: Fold the length in half, with right sides
together, so that the piece now measures 39" wide x
21"long. Sew the side seams, using a 5/8" seam
allowance. Finish seams with a serger, or zig-zag stitch and
trim close to the stitching. Press seams flat.
- Top hem: Turn in 1"along the top edge of the bag;
press. Turn in 1" again and press. Stitch close to the
first fold.
- Bottom: To create depth at the bottom of the bag, reach
inside the bag, flattening out one corner so that it forms a
triangle and the side seam is centered, as shown. Measure
about 3½" from the point and draw a line across the
triangle. (Fig 1). Stitch along this line, reinforcing
stitching. Repeat for the second corner. Press the
triangular corners flat against the bag bottom, secure with
fabric glue or fusible tape if desired.
|
- Straps: (If using ready-made straps, skip to * below). Cut
two lengths of fabric, 3" wide by your desired length
(approximately 14" long to carry by hand or 34" to
carry over the shoulder.) Turn in 1" on one long side
of each strap and press. Turn in ¼"on the opposite
side. Bring this pressed edge over the first, bringing it
close to, but not completely covering, the first fold, as
shown. (Fig 2). Zig-zag through all thicknesses of the
strap, catching the second fold in the stitching as shown.
Zig-zag again along the opposite long side of the strap. (*)
Pin straps to top edge of bag, turning under ½" of the
raw edge in, placing it against the bag for a clean finish,
and spacing strap ends evenly. Hold the bag and adjust if
needed for a comfortable fit. Stitch straps to bag, squaring
the stitching and reinforcing with "X" stitching
as shown (Fig 3).
|
 |
| Finishing |
| To give
the bag some shaping, make vertical creases at the corners as
you'd find on a paper grocery bag. Press, then stitch the
creases in from top edge to the bottom of the bag. For a rigid
bottom, cut plastic canvas to the size of the bag bottom. Cover
with a fabric sleeve and insert into the bottom of the bag. |
|
|