Art with My Needle ~ Week 36

About a month ago I promised you The Gigolo Story and finally I managed to find the instructions.

click on photo to enlarge

Right you have the instructions, off you go now and work hard! :roll:

You will require:

  • Fabric for body and hat
  • Plain silk,cotton or taffeta fabric for the face
  • lining for body
  • Vilene/interfacing to line body fabric
  • Flannel for needle pages
  • Wool for pompoms
  • Four or five ½ inch bone rings
  • Embroidery cottons for the face and to blanket stitch around the edge of the body
  • 1cm wide ribbon to cover seam line at neck and make a bow at front.
  • 1 metre of 2½ cm ribbon for arms and legs
  • Polyester toy Filling for the head
  • 1 Thimble for the end of one arm
  • Small safety pins for the ear rings and a for the end of one arm and both legs.
  • Card to make the pattern and for making pom-poms
  • Spools of thread for sewing and for the legs
  • buttons for the front of the body

Home made freehand pattern for hat, face and body.  I am sure you can make a better shape for the head.

Hat = 9cm X 3·5cm (place 9cm end on fold) and add ·75cm for hems.

Face = 9cm at the widest point, 4cm at the neck and 8cm long, add all around·75cm for hems.

Body = 15cms wide and 12cms deep, I used a bowl to get the semi-circle and extended the sides. Place the straight edge on fold and add ·75cm for hems.

~#~#~#~#~

For the Hat, place fabric on a fold and cut one.

For the Face, cut two.

With right sides together, join the front face to the hat followed by the head back to the hat. Press seams. Next, on wrong side sew along each face side to top of hat. Turn right side out and pack the head with filling and finally turn up hem allowance and hand stitch hem at the neck edge to hold the filling in place.  Then embroider the eyes, nose and mouth in satin stitch, with suitable colours of stranded cotton.

The faces are slightly different on Elly’s needle case and my very old well used model above.

#~#~#~#

For the body/book, place fabric on a fold and cut

  • 1 in main fabric
  • 1 in lining
  • 1 in Vilene/interlining
  • 1½ in flannel (to make three needle pages).
  • Divide the 1 metre of 2½ cm ribbon in four for the arms and legs.

Start by making a three layer sandwich…

First lay down the interfacing.  On top place the outer fabric with the front side facing upward.  Next position the four ribbons carefully as shown on the paper diagram or on the finished gigelo above.  For the sewing stage the ribbons should be the filling of the sandwich with the ends placed just beyond the seam edge.  It is a good idea to fold & tack them in place, so a) they do not move in the sewing and b) can be released once the body is together.  On top lay the lining with the right side down.  Pin or tack all the layers together and machine sew just inside the seam allowance, leaving a small opening.  Secure the thread, remove the pins or tacking threads and turn the body inside out.  Finish the opening with slip stitches.  Remove the tacking stitches from the ribbons and press, then blanket stitch around the body edge.

Finish off the ends of the ribbon by turning in the raw edges and hemming, leave just enough space on the legs and one of the arms to slip a small safety pin through.  On the other arm end stitch one of the bone or plastic rings into the hem.  I almost forgot!!!

With left over scraps of fabric & lining make a little bag small enough to hold a thimble securely.  Attach it to the ring at the end of the arm.  Stitch buttons down along the front of the body.  The size and shape of the buttons will determine how many you use.  Elly’s gigolo had three glass buttons while mine has six baby buttons sewn in pairs.

Nearly there!

Now we are ready to add the pages. Fold the double page in half and insert the other one between them. Stitch across the the folded edge to enclose the third page.  Trim the edge with a pinking shears.  Fold the needle case cover in half and insert the pages as in the picture above. Machine sew through all the layers to give a strong shoulder line.

Now mark the centre point with a pin and do the same with the head.  Marching the pins hand stitch the head to the body securely, cover the join with the narrow ribbon and tie in a bow at the front.  Stitch the bone rings on for the ears and one at the centre top as a loop for hanging.  Add five or six pins each to the ears and the arm.  Feed the leg ribbons through toning spools and make sure to place the safety pin at the bottom crosswise to keep the spools in place.

Last but not least make the pompoms.  There are two versions of how to make them in this link

This is the type of pompom maker described in the video.  The three sizes interlink for safe keeping.  I have this for years.

Just like me - in the groove!

So when you have two matching pompoms stitch them to the corners of the hat and hey presto, you have your very own gigolo!

Now who is going to be the first to send me a photo of their finished masterpiece?

13 Comments »

  1. Nancy said,

    May 5, 2010 at 2:45 pm

    Grannymar,

    Please do not hold your breath while waiting for me to send you a photo of the finished masterpiece.

    I read all those instructions and went back to bed. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

  2. Tech Unsavvy said,

    May 5, 2010 at 4:55 pm

    Pretty darn cute! Um, where can I order one? Sorry, Grannymar, looks like your followers tend to be on the slacker-side. Or perhaps they are still recovering from the cherry brandy.

  3. steph said,

    May 5, 2010 at 6:24 pm

    @ Nancy :lol:

    And there was me slaving away all day long to get my gigolo finished first ;-) ;-)

  4. Grannymar said,

    May 5, 2010 at 6:36 pm

    Nancy - I thought you would have a pair of them made by now! ;)

    Tech U - Do you think I need to crack my whip?

    Steph _ Slaving? When did you ever slave? Hope you had a fun day.

  5. bikehikebabe said,

    May 5, 2010 at 8:59 pm

    I only got though half before my head fell onto the keyboard.
    z z z z z z z z z z z z z z z z z ( zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz looks like 7s)

  6. Nancy said,

    May 5, 2010 at 9:15 pm

    Steph…

    Poor kid. Come here, let me give you a hug…..

    Cousin Nancy

  7. steph said,

    May 5, 2010 at 9:56 pm

    @ Nancy

    Aaw! thanks Missus

    That Grannymar one has me worn out today ;-)

    I hope you’ve got your pompoms (or was it puppodums) made by now?

  8. wisewebwoman said,

    May 6, 2010 at 12:40 am

    The thing is you sound so cheerful with these 800 pages of instructions, GM!
    My mother would make needlecases with old cigarette packs (my father was a fierce smoker) for the covers, she’d cover them in fabric and insert fabric pages and then embroider the person’s name on the front. I wish I’d kept mine, it was green with purple embroidery.
    My favourite bit on yours is the spools of thread for the legs.
    XO
    WWW

  9. Magpie11 said,

    May 6, 2010 at 11:24 am

    Gigolo?…beware ladies….toy boys are safer!

  10. Grannymar said,

    May 7, 2010 at 8:12 am

    BHB - Those z z z z zs make a great pattern!

  11. Grannymar said,

    May 7, 2010 at 8:19 am

    Steph - Did I talk you dry? ;)

    WWW - It turned out to be a rather long winded post, easier to demonstrate in the real world than on paper! :(

    Magpie - “toy boys are safer!” Very true!

  12. bikehikebabe said,

    May 7, 2010 at 3:12 pm

    You say those Z Z Z Z Z s make a great pattern. How about stringing them on a thin wire, making a round, close to the neck, necklace?

  13. Grannymar said,

    May 7, 2010 at 3:15 pm

    BHB - It sounds pretty!

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