In August, DD1, DD2, K3 and I took a trip to Shipshewana. My daughters and I like to go once every year or two, mainly as a quiet getaway and to do some shopping. Our favorite places are the Amish grocery E&S Sales, Yoder's Meat, and Lolly's Fabrics. We visit pretty much all the shops, and the flea market too, but those are our can't miss favorites.
This year, we invited K3 to go along. The thought process was that now that she's 8, she might enjoy seeing all the horses and buggies, plus it would be a special girl trip that she didn't have to include her brothers in. We also thought she would love digging through all the fat quarters of fabric in the wooden boat at Lolly's.
Yep, she loved it. She did get a little bored waiting for her aunts and I to look at fabric (I was shopping for a few future gift projects), so I told her that if she wanted to pick out some fabric, I would make her a nightgown or something out of it. Well, after that it was hard to drag her out of the store!
Turned out that she wanted a skirt, not a nightgown. Which was fine, as I've made skirts and dresses in the past, when my girls were little.
Not only did she want a skirt, she wanted it made out of many fabrics, not just one. The girl had an armload of fat quarters that she had chosen out of Lolly's boat. Way, way, more fabric than it would take to make a skirt the size of an eight year old. I talked her into paring her choices down to eight fabrics. Which I let her take to the counter and pay for, and carry in her very own shopping bag.
She liked that very much.
In late August, we sat down together and I asked her what kind of skirt she had in mind with all those eight different fabrics. Vertical stripes? Horizontal tiers?
Patchwork. That's what she wanted. Squares sewn together patchwork style.
Okay, that I could do. It would be loud, but heck, she's eight.
But wait, that's not all she had in mind! The squares couldn't be random. I had to sew them together in rows that would make diagonal stripes when they were a skirt.
And, she wanted a high-low style. Knee length in front, brushing the ground at her heels.
I sketched as she talked. Mainly so that I made sure I understood what she envisioned. It was apparent that she had given this custom skirt a lot of thought, and I wanted to get it right.
This skirt turned out so nice, I bet your granddaughter is thrilled with it.
ReplyDelete