Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Project 2: Animals of the Rainforest - The reveal




This is what the cut-and-sew fabric looked like when it came. I was really pleased, and very excited to get to work on my new bag.  After all the hard work I'd put into designing it, it was hard to believe I was about to see it come to life.

















This is the front of the finished bag. It's so cute!!
Just as I wanted, it's got plenty of room for books or groceries. It would work well as a purse, shopping or beach bag, tote bag, or even a book bag. The fabric is 100% kona cotton, so it's durable.  I washed the fabric in hot water, dried it on the hottest setting, and ironed it to ensure that all the shrinkage that might occur already had. The colors stayed nice and bright, too.

Animals of the Rainforest Cut-n-Sew bag. And the backside of the bag.  Looks great, doesn't it? All in all, I'm really very pleased with the way the project turned out. I thank my mom in a huge way for constantly pushing me to actually get this bag made, and to the Art Institute Online for assigning me a shopping bag project in the first place. Who knew that only 9 years later, I would end up making this?











If you would like to order this cut-and-sew pattern for yourself, you can visit my shop at Spoonflower by following this link here: Animals of the Rainforest bag

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Project 2: Animals of the Rainforest - Step 5

Since my end goal is a cut-and-sew pattern that will fit on one yard of fabric including the instructions (thanks to Spoonflower for putting together a contest that would motivate me to finish what I started!!), I needed to figure out how big each panel would need to be in order for this to work.

A single yard, for those who have never done this, is 36 wide x 42 high.  I settled on front and back panels being 16"x16" each, side panels being 8"x16" each, a bottom panel of 16"x8", and two straps that were 5"x22" each.  This gave me plenty of room for instructions and made the bag sufficiently large enough to be useful as a shopping bag in addition to a tote bag, reusable gift bag, or even a purse.

I built the seam allowances I wanted in to each panel so that it would be harder for people who purchased the pattern to make mistakes by adding a colored border around each piece.  This also helped the pieces to stand out from one another once cut out.  Each edge was labeled to match up with the one it was to be sewn to in order to make it easier.
Finally, it was time to assemble each piece and put the instructions together.  In order to test that the edges were marked correctly, I created a half-size version of the bag out of paper and scotch tape using the techniques I would give in the instructions.  Confident that everything worked correctly, I finally finished putting together the cut-and-sew pattern, just in time to upload it to Spoonflower's bag contest!!







Here is a small version of the finished piece:



I hope to have pictures of the actual bag in the next few weeks :)

Project 2: Animals of the Rainforest - Step 4

Now that I had the overall fabric for the bag design the way I wanted it, it was time to create the back panel of the bag.  After all, this was what would really "sell" the bag and make it more than just a bag - it would be an educational tool as well.  I chose the Segoe Print for the font, used illustrator's object->expand and then added a stroke outline in a lighter color.  To the stroke I applied the fern brush stroke I had created in the first step, which gave the lettering a nice organic feel.  I then added a small paragraph of information about the animal underneath its name in the same font, but without the stroke outline.

Each animal got its own info file, and then I put them all together in the back panel like so:



Now that the main fabric pattern was designed, and the back panel was done, it was time to put the bag together.

Project 2: Animals of the Rainforest - Step 3

Arranging the animals in a pleasing configuration that allows for a repeating pattern was the next stage of the project.  The thing to remember when creating a repeating pattern in illustrator is to match the placement along the x-y axis.  Anything placed in one corner must appear in the other three corners as well.  Anything on a side edge must appear on the opposite side edge.  For example, in a 2inx2in square, if you place an object at (0,2) you must also place that same object at (0,0), (2,2), and (2,0) in order for the object to tile properly.  This is the hardest part of it.  


Now I had the animals where I wanted them, but I still wasn't satisfied.  The maccaw was blending in with the environment and, honestly, didn't seem to be a very accurate representation of the maccaws to be found in a tropical environment. The green was overly dominant, and there were too many areas of plain brown.  I did a little more research into some flowers to add into this picture and found the orchid and another flower to add to the scene.
Revised maccaw




Finally, the revised design.  The design tiled perfectly (I verified this using Photoshop), and I was ready for the next stage.