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“Let’s Eat Cake” Apron

I have a sweet treat for you today!

I call it the “Let’s Eat Cake” Apron.
Because it’s always time for cake.

I don’t think you can have enough aprons.
And if by some unlikely chance you think you do have enough – this one would make a great gift too!
(Did you know Christmas is 3 months away? Ack!)

This super cute gingham apron is decked out with cake ribbon and embroidery and is finished at the hem with a retro-y (yes. That’s a word.) scalloped border.
If you can’t find cake ribbon, you could take the methods used in this tutorial and adapt them to any ribbon, to coordinate with your decor and style!

Ready to get started? Here’s what you’ll need:

• Fabric for Apron – about 1 yard
• Small piece of contrasting fabric for pocket – about 10″ x 20″
• Decorative Ribbon – about 16″
(I got this ribbon in a little fabric shop in North Carolina.
I am sorry but I don’t know the name of the shop or the brand.
But I’ve seen some really cute cupcake ribbon lately and I think that would make a darling apron too!! )

•Ric Rac
• Embroidery Floss – colors to coordinate with your ribbon
• Thread

 

Start by making your pocket.
Redraw a design from your ribbon onto a 10″ x 10″ piece of  contrasting fabric with a disappearing fabric pen.
I chose one of the cake styles. The overall size of the design was 2 1/2″ x 2 1/2″.

Put your fabric in an embroidery hoop. Outline your drawn lines with a stem embroidery stitch, in the colors that match your ribbon.
To do this, separate your embroidery floss, threading your needle with 3 strands.
Knot the thread and bring it up at one corner of your design.

Bring your needle from front to back to front again, facing the place where your thread came up. The distance between the thread and the stitch should be about the same.

Pull the thread through the fabric.

Hold the loose part of the thread downward, and then make another stitch just like the first, with the needle coming up where the first stitch ends.

Continue making stitches around all the lines, making sure to hold the thread end the same direction before each stitch.
(If you need help with these stitches, send me an email! I’d love to help!)

What a cute little cake.

Using a bowl or other rounded item, trace 3/4 of a circle around the design. Move the bowl up and trace the bottom again so the top of the circle is scooped too. Cut out your pocket and cut this shape out of your remaining contrasting fabric as well.

Place your two pocket pieces right sides together. Lay the ric rac between the pieces.
Sew around the sides of the pocket, catching half the ric rac. Leave a small section open at the bottom for turning.
Clip around the pocket up to the seam and trim off the corners so it will turn well.

Turn the pocket right sides out and press.

Cut our a large rectangle for your apron skirt  – 27″ x 16″.
Mark the center bottom point on the long side of the rectangle. Use the same bowl to trace scallops onto the bottom of the apron, centering the first scallop over the halfway point.

Cut your scallops out.

Cut out a 3″ x 27″ rectangle. Lay your apron skirt over this piece and cut out the bottom edge so it is scalloped also.
This is your hem facing.

Hem the top, straight edge of the facing. Turn the edge over twice and sew.

With right sides together and the scalloped ends together, sew the bottom pieces of the apron and hem facing. Sew along the sides as well.
Clip the curves up to the seam and clip little “v’s” out of the top corners of the scallops.

Don’t clip through the seam. It makes you say fake swear words. Trust me.

Turn the scallops right sides out, with the hem facing to the back. Press the scallops down.
Hem the sides of your apron skirt and sew along the edges of your scallops, 1/4″ from the edge.

Determine where you’d like your pocket and pin it on. Mine is 3″ from the top of the apron skirt and 4 1/2″ from the left edge.

Sew around the pocket, except for the top. Make sure you catch the section you left open for turning.

Cut two rectangles of apron material to sew to the top and bottom of your ribbon, 1 1/4″ x 16″.

Sew these to the top and bottom of your ribbon with a 1/8″ seam. Press the seams towards the center.

Cut out 4 rectangles for your ties, 3″ x 36″
Cut out a back waistband piece also, 3″ x 16″.

Sew a tie piece to each side of your center waistband piece.

Sew the remaining two tie pieces to either side of your waistband back piece.

Gather the top of your apron skirt so that it measures 16″.
Pin and sew the apron skirt to the center waistband front, right sides together.

Fold the waistband piece back up and lay the other waistband piece and ties over it, right sides together. Sew around the ties on all three sides and sew along the top of the waistband pieces. If you want, angle the ends of the ties. Leave the bottom section of the waistband open.

Turn the ties and waistband right sides out. Press well.

Turn the bottom of the waistband back piece under 1/2″ and hand sew down.

You’re all done!! What a cute apron you’ve made!!

You could shrink your measurements down and make this for any little helpers you might have around the kitchen too!

Doesn’t it make you want to bake a cake?

Or maybe put it on and eat a cake?

Either way, you will look so cute.

Category: Apron, Kitchen, Sewing  Tags: , ,  52 Comments

Gingerbread S’mores Cake

What’s not to love in that title?? Seriously. Gingerbread, Chocolate and Marshmallows. Heaven in a pan. We made this last night and I just had to share it with you.

This recipe came from last month’s “Everyday with Rachel Ray” and she has it on her website.  So I want to be careful here not to infringe any copy-write laws – but I believe I can tell you the ingredients and then summarize the directions without getting into trouble. Sorry – just paranoid about those kinds of things.

Ingredients:

  • 1 stick (4 ounces) unsalted butter
  • 1 1/2 cups flour
  • 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 2 teaspoons ground ginger
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup packed light brown sugar
  • 2 eggs, at room temperature
  • 3 tablespoons unsulfured molasses
  • 8 ounces chocolate bars, such as Hershey’s, broken into pieces
  • 2 1/2 cups mini marshmallows

Directions:

They have written this recipe for the grill – but my grill is on summer vacation right now so I used the oven and it worked great. Basically you mix your dry ingredients together, your wet ingredients together, and then combine everything -  except the chocolate and marshmallows.

Bake the cake in an iron skillet at 350 degrees for 25 minutes. Take the cake out of the oven - test for doneness. Break up the chocolate into little pieces and layer over the top of the cake. Then cover the chocolate with marshmallows. We used more than the 2 1/2 cups they call for. Increase the temp to 400 and bake for 5 more minutes or until marshmallows are toasted.

Eat. While. Warm.

Here’s a picture of the side view.

It turned out wonderful, but here’s what I’m going to try next time. More chocolate on top. Just because. And I also think I might pour half the batter in, layer in some chocolate pieces, then pour the rest of the batter in, then bake. Just so there’s some creamy chocolate in the cake.

Oh and in my usual graceful style, in cutting the cake I ended up with marshmallow in my hair. How is that even possible?

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Category: Cooking  Tags: ,  21 Comments