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Sewing Sustainable Toys

Hi Sewcialists! Back when I used to blog and sew for myself regularly, my “thing” was using sheets and curtains that I thrifted for yardage. I figured this was both cheaper and better for the environment than purchasing new fabric. I patted myself on the back for being so green and sustainable.

However… I was also an unnecessarily fast sewer. Because I was childless and just learning to sew, and this was the heyday of Sew Weekly, I used to churn out garments very quickly: one or two a week, for about three years! This had its good and bad points. Good: because I was immersing myself into sewing and practicing constantly, I was able to rack up hundreds, if not thousands of hours of practice, and since I didn’t have children to eat into my mental bandwidth, I was able to tackle challenging projects (a historical pirate coat! meticulous stripe and pattern matching! working with expensive beaded fabrics!) that stretched my patterning and sewing skills.

Unfortunately, my unfocused prolific output also produced a lot of duds that didn’t get worn much, whether due to fabric-pattern mismatch (it turns out that, surprise surprise, sheets don’t work for every type of garment!), garments that didn’t work for my body shape or lifestyle or existing wardrobe, or just plain poor fit. I ended up donating a lot of garments or passing them on to friends if I felt they were decent enough, and some I chopped up for muslins or kid clothes, but I still had a lot of pieces left over. My thrifty immigrant family background meant that I couldn’t bring myself to throw away scraps, though, so I hauled bags of scraps and remnants around through three moves, always thinking that I’d find a use for them in the elusive “someday.”

Fast-forward to last year, when my then three-year-old suddenly went through a unicorn phase. And then a dinosaur phase. And then an African animal phase. And then a marine animal phase. Basically he’s just a budding zoologist, and because he’s definitely my child, he’s also a collector at heart. This meant that he wanted ALL THE TOYS to go with all his interests. There’s no way I could afford to (and even if I could, I wouldn’t want to) buy all the animal figurines he wanted, and my brain felt like it was stagnating from all the mindless mom-activities, so I figured I would give myself the mental exercise of figuring out how to sew all the creatures he was interested in. And since plushies are small, I was finally able to use up a lot of the scraps I’ve been saving! Larger pieces worked for the actual pattern pieces, and the tinier scraps worked for stuffing once I cut them up a bit.

Here’s a look at a selection of his entire menagerie, representing fifteen months of requests and several phases of obsessions:

Dinosaurs: Triceratops, Parasaurolophus, Stegosaurus, Liopleurodon, Diplodocus, Tyrannosaurs, Dimetrodon, Plesiosaurus, Ankylosaurus, Pterosaurs, Brachiosaurus

African animals: hippos, rhinos, Cape buffalo, elephant, lions

All the unicorns, with a couple bonus dragons and a pegasus

And now, for a picture of all the stuffed toys I’ve made:

I’m not sure what the moral of this story is: save all your scraps because you might use them five years later? Have demanding children so that you’re forced to unselfishly sew for them, thereby using up hoarded scraps? At any rate, in case you’re interested in sewing some stuffed toys for the kids in your life (or yourself, if you’re a kid at heart!), here are some tips:

Useful links for plushie-making and designing:

I hope this inspires you to give plushie sewing a try! It’s fun to do something a little different as a palate cleanser in between garment sewing, and you can always donate your finished plushies to charities like The People’s Sewing Army!

I’m Cindy of Cation Designs (although my blog is now gathering dust; I’m much more active on IG these days), a mom of two (okay how weird is that to say), a science teacher, and an aspiring costumer/cosplayer.

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