Baby Sleep Mat
I was looking for a baby sleep mat pattern and couldn't find what I wanted. There was one that used a pillow and made it as a pillowcase. While that seemed neat and practical, I was concerned as we were always told not to put babies on pillows for fear of suffocation, so I thought I would create my own.
This is not going to be the most comprehensive tutorial, but hopefully it will be helpful for someone.
I chose flannelette for its softness and fleecy for added soft padding.
I bought 3 remnants, two of flannelette and a small one of cotton, plus some wadding, 30mm thick. I was guided by the size of the pieces and my research, which indicated that a pillowcase would be about the right size. I made mine a bit bigger than a pillowcase.
In my overwhelmingly huge stash, I had a piece of red and a big amount of white fleecy.
Cutting the flannelette into the right widths gave 4 similar-sized pieces.
If buying fabrics specifically for this, I would guess that the back would need about 0.8 metre, the underlay (the inside bit where the baby will lie) would need about the same, and the overlay/front would need about 0.6m. The little cotton piece I added to the front was about 15-20cm of fabric. I used a piece of white fleecy 15-20cm in length and half the width of the cotton piece to line it. The underlay was in red fleecy and I had enough of the flannelette to sew that on top of half of the underlay so that the red did not show when the bag is closed.
The cotton piece at the top of the overlay is optional. I used it because I did not have enough flannelette and because it was just so cute. I was thrilled to be able to get two different zoo animal prints to use together.
I used a 40cm (16") zip from my collection.
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I lined the cotton piece with white fleecy for softness and warmth. I cut the fleecy to the size of the folded piece of cotton. |
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I stitched the fleecy to the cotton near the edge. |
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Folding the cotton piece in half, I cut the flannelette piece to the same width, allowing for seam allowance, and squared up the edge of the remnant. |
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I overlocked the seam between the cotton and flannelette on the overlay piece. |
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Working with the flannelette pieces for the back, I cut a piece of red fleecy to about the same size for the underlay. |
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The last piece of flannelette was sewn to the fleecy about halfway down, and turned back and pressed. This step could be skipped if you wanted the fleecy to show. |
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This made the underlay: the part where the baby will actually lie. |
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Sandwiching the back, zip and underlay |
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When the zip was sewn in, I turned back the underlay to reveal the unsewn side of the zip. |
Lining up the right-hand side of the zip, face up, with the edge of the front, I sewed in the zip.
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Overlay at top of picture, zip sewn in, back at bottom of picture. |
With the back face up and the underlay and overlay face down, I sewed together all the pieces from the base of the bag, up the side, across the top (with new curves) and down the other side, leaving the base open. Once I was sure I knew what I was doing, I trimmed the seams and turned through the whole bag. I top-stitched all around the outside.
I stay-stitched the red fleecy to the overlay before inserting the wadding, and pressed up both open sides of the base.
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And here it is!! |
Is there a video?
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