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How to Store Unfinished Sewing Projects #SewingProjects #DollClothesPatterns

The background image shows a basket of sewing goodies. In the foreground, we see the words "how to store unfinished sewing projects."

Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

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Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

We all have them.

Yes, you know you do.

Those projects that you have cut out and left sitting on the ironing board–those unfinished sewing projects–we like to think they will disappear if we just kick them under the bed, but they do not.

They stick around.

For years.

Until you face them…

Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

Yep, even I have unfinished sewing projects. Would you like to know how I store them and get them done?

I actually keep my unfinished sewing projects in a shoebox:

Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

And as you can see in the photo above, I keep them together with the original patterns. Sometimes I keep the name of the doll I was sewing for, with them, so I can remember who those projects were meant for.

But how do I tackle them?

One at a time, of course!

And I take the whole shoe box with me on camping trips and road trips. That way, if I’m bored while traveling or sitting around the campfire during a family trip, I can whip out my box of unfinished projects and make baby steps — sew a little bit here; sew a little bit there.

And if I really hate a project — like maybe the project got part-way finished but I just didn’t like the way it looked — I cut it into something different.

I alter it, to make it into something I’ll be happier with. Something fresh and new.

Once again, it’s time to mention my doll clothes pattern alteration class!

In my Creative Spark class, “How to Alter Doll Clothes Patterns,” you will learn how to make long sleeves shorter, how to make short sleeves longer, and how to lengthen and shorten pants patterns for your doll clothes.

Not only that, but I share my “magic resizing formula” with you.

It shows you how to take a skirt pattern that fits an 8″ doll like this one:

Click here for all the free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos you’ll need to make this outfit: https://wp.me/p1LmCj-I8g

and make it fit a 10″ doll like this one:

Please click here for all the patterns and tutorial videos you’ll need to make this outfit: https://wp.me/p1LmCj-H3I (available after 6 July 2020)

And there’s no specific time limit to your courses. You can just take your time and learn at the pace that suits you.

Disclaimer/Credit/Affiliate Marketing Link:

*ChellyWood.com earns money by linking to Amazon, eBay, Michaels, Etsy, and other online affiliate programs. Links provided above may be affiliate links. For a full list of my affiliate programs, and to understand how cookies are used to help this website earn money, please see my “Privacy Policy” page.

The free printable PDF sewing pattern offered here on this website is the design of Chelly Wood, and it is marked with a Creative Commons Attribution mark. Any similarity to other companies’ or other crafters’ projects of a similar nature is unintended.

Are you lovin’ all this free stuff from ChellyWood.com? Please show your support by telling people about ChellyWood.com. That’s what the “Creative Commons Attribution” mark on my patterns means: if you use my free patterns and tutorials, you should tell people where you got all this great free stuff!

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