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I remember that! You’d invited me to come with you. We got to wave to Rupal through the window, then the producer came out and broke the news to us that we’d been bounced out by Maggie. Never mind, there’s always another time! And we still got to visit Richard III.
Here we are outside the venue. When I found that no-one was coming to the “do” I went out onto the main street dressed in my stripes and directed people up to the hidden-away little hall. That was our (Aggie Baggies) first handout with hand-written labels as there was a postal strike. π
Double post again!! How stupid of me…
I’ll use it to remark that I’ve also morsbagged at some poorly attended “do’s” (e.g. a craft fair that almost no customers came to) and have been very glad that I had my sewing machine and kits and could spend the day usefully sewing morsbags instead of grumbling about the organiser’s poor publicity.
It occurs to me that it would be a good idea for you to have some ready-made bags at your make-and-take session for people who pop in and can’t stay, or for someone who’s made themselves a bag to take another for a friend or relative. It’s also a good move in case you find yourselves with such a big queue of people waiting their turn that it becomes silly!
Better to give someone a bag you made earlier than to expect them to wait an hour before they can sew. It has been known…. π
If you’re lucky enough to be able to get some publicity – a reporter from your local paper or radio for example, it’s very nice (and effective!) to have a bag or two to give to them!
You make several good points Sazzie!
If you have room you could have a display of “how to make a morsbag” with part made bags pinned up. I have a set. Something like –
cut out pieces
handles sewn into strips
handles sewn into bag facing down
handles sewn up into position
label added
first side seams sewn
second side seams sewn.I’d forgotten about the bell!! π³ Well mentioned Sazzie. We don’t have a bell, but we DO have a gong – works just as well.
Being cheapskates, we tried clothes pegs, but they’re too bulky to get the needle past them. We also tried paper clips and bulldog clips of various styles but they just didn’t work as well as Wonder Clips. If you have some hair clips or paper clips you could try them out and see what works. It might be back to pins if not.
You can sew up unused bundles after your workshop session – or keep them for the next one if you want to. π It’s great fun to hold one, you and your friend will probably be tired but happy at the end of it.
It’s not relevant to your sewing workshop, but as you’re now an expert morsbag-maker yourself you might want to try the “fold & sew” method that Masterclock (he’s my husband) & I use. Basically, we don’t iron any kits that we sew ourselves. We just fold and sew! It takes a few seconds longer to sew the handles and the tops of the bags as they are not pre-ironed, but in my opinion you save hours of ironing kits – and I hate ironing. π
(That’s why I save ironed kits for the next workshop)Many expert morsbaggers still iron the creases into their kits – it’s a matter of personal preference.
It made me smile when you wrote that you’re addicted, Gudrun π Welcome to the club!
I remember “Lucky Bags” from when I was a child. We got a very small amount of pocket money and they were not good value for our 6d (2.5p these days) that we got every Saturday.I don’t think you’ll need to worry about running short of material for a while. We’ve found that when you give someone a bag and won’t take any money for it, they want to give you something back – and what could be better than giving you their unwanted curtains, duvet covers and so on. As a single duvet cover usually makes about 9 bags, you soon have plenty more fabric.
You’re doing a great job getting those bags out into your community, Gudrun! It’s exciting giving them away isn’t it? I’ve never actually bagged someone in a supermarket queue myself, though lots of other people have. I never have a nice clean, SPARE bag with me!
Is your pod Wundertuete? I see you’ve already made 130 bags – that’s fantastic!! Is it just you sewing or do you have a group of people?
Offcuts mentions Wonder Clips – and they are a much better alternative to pins for keeping handles in position while you sew, though they cost a lot more than pins do.
There are some ideas for presenting your kits. I find that some people tend to rummage, unfold the kit and separate the body from the handle, and leave them all in a right old mess!
Offcuts has tried presenting presewn handles and bag bodies separately so the “customer” can mix and match the pieces. That way someone who likes long handles can have them, and the handles and bag don’t have to match unless they want them to. She may have some photos.
I like the idea that Chiara had – you fold the handle into the bag body, then roll or fold it and end up with a neat rectangular package, each one held together with a little strip of spare fabric. The packages can be put, neat side up, in a handy box (the sort lettuces or tomatoes are delivered to shops in are just right – more recycling!). The little tie of fabric stops most people from making too much mess!
Turns this –
into this –
Sorry, I couldn’t find any photos of the kits in lettuce boxes, but you get the idea!
How did I manage to post the first bit three times??
- This reply was modified 9 years, 6 months ago by beattie.
Whoops, posted before I was ready!! Derr!
I was going to add that if making kits for newbies, I usually cut out the bag body and handles, and iron in the folds, then fold them together, and that’s it!
We don’t usually use pins, preferring the method where you measure from each edge of the bag with a handy object (postcards are just right) and add the handle in when you’ve almost sewn up to the point where the handle is inserted.
There are many opinions on how to decide where the handles should go and I don’t want to reopen “pin-gate”!!
So basically, the answer is, it’s up to you!! π
Try it the way you describe and see how you get on. You should be able to get plenty of bags made and spread the word very effectively.
Just to add, I would say that you wouldn’t need an iron at all if you do the way you describe. The bag doesn’t need ironing after it’s made – it’s only a bag, but other opinions are available!!
- This reply was modified 9 years, 6 months ago by beattie.
They are really good questions Gudrun! There are no hard and fast answers and you’ll probably get different opinions. π
For us, the answer depends a bit on who will be sewing (I assume adults), whether they’ve sewn before and how fast you want the throughput to be.
The kits you describe would give the maximum throughput, but the people making the bags wouldn’t know how to make a bag from scratch.
I think in the past, Offcuts has started with uncut material, so the participants carry out the whole process. This is at the opposite extreme and is slow and needs a lot of helpers, but the “customers” do learn everything there is to know.
Double post! Again!!
- This reply was modified 9 years, 6 months ago by beattie. Reason: Double post
Thanks for reporting back Gudrun! I’m glad your experiments were successful. Interesting that standard sized morsbags won out again! π
What IS happening? Offcuts tells me that she phoned Channel 4 enquiries and they confirmed that Three In A Bed isn’t on for the next 2 weeks.
Apologies for getting us all excited! I got my info from Tanya @ Coastal Valley. Presumably she was misled, like the rest of us, by the Radio Times. Ahh well, after the Bank Holiday, maybe…..Great news Tori! I liked your idea of giving out bags to be distributed by so many people = lots of diversity – just the job!! π
Getting another food bank to use morsbags is wonderful, as you have a lot of bags to give out every month.
If you have a lot of smaller pieces of fabric to use up you may want to join them to make bits large enough to make a bag. I use a felled seam to join them securely.
You can also make morsbags the traditional way, using separate pieces for the front and the back – they don’t have to match, and neither do the handles! π
True! Children often use ordinary sized morsbags as shoulder bags. They also like their “own” bags.
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