Wednesday, December 30, 2015

Dan's Deer Pillow

There is a background story behind the creation of Dan's deer pillow. This past Thanksgiving, my son had the new experience of going deer hunting. He took the appropriate classes about safety and guns, and was to go adventuring with his father-in-law and brother-in-law into the woods near a lakeside family cabin. Dan sent us this photo of himself wearing his rugged mountain man clothes and sporting his stern, no-nonsense attitude.  It cracked me up, and reminded me of the Brawny paper towel lumberjack.


Apparently cell phone reception is fine deep in the woods, because while he was scanning for deer from his tree stand, Dan's sister posted him this photo on Facebook...


... to which Dan replied, "This is the first deer I've seen on this trip!" 

Then I saw a pattern for a pieced Deer Quilt Block on the Sew Fresh Quilts blog and just had to make it. I picked a leafy green for the background to give the impression the deer was deep in the forest. This pdf pattern finishes as a 8" block so some of those pieces are tiny. I did not want to invest the time for a whole quilt, but a small wall hanging would be the right level of effort. I finished the block long before house guests arrived for the holidays.


Then I got the idea to print the photo of Dan in his rugged pose on fabric and use it on the reverse side, but ran out of time before Christmas morning. So I scanned the block I'd pieced, printed its scan and the photo on paper, placed them back to back in a sheet protector, and gifted that under the tree. This also had the advantage I could give my son the choice of a wall hanging or a small pillow. Here is my son holding up his promise of a gift. He elected I make it into a pillow that he could take with him on future hunting trips.


Today I set out to complete the pillow. This is the photo fabric I used. It worked like a dream in my inkjet printer. What did not work like a dream was that I could not find the package I'd bought before Christmas and had to run out and buy another after 90 minutes of frustrated, fruitless searching about my sewing room and computer area. Five 8½" x 11" sheets of cotton twill come in the package for $11.99 but I used a 50% off coupon so paid just over $1.00 per sheet – if you do not count the first package I lost somewhere in the house. Oh, well. If it turns up I will return it. I was determined to complete and blog about this project today.


Here is the bordered block and the bordered photo squared up and ready for a 14" x14" pillow form. I topped stitched the brown border seams around the photo to reinforce them. 


I backed the pieced block with a square of bamboo batting covered by a square of flannel. The layers can be seen in the upper right corner of the next photo. This precaution was to keep the reindeer head intact by preventing those ¼" seams from coming loose. The block was not paper pieced. I did a stitch in the ditch around the deer head and antlers through all three layers and here is how it looked from the back.


All that was left was to insert a zipper at the bottom edge, sew around the sides and top, and insert a pillow form. Here is the end result.


The infamous photo is on the reverse side. It is orange and somewhat scary, so perhaps it is better suited for Halloween. Nevertheless, I will mail the pillow off with a note that wishes my son Dan a "Merry Christmas". Much to my son's chagrin and my relief, it was a merry holiday for the unscathed deer as well.

9 comments:

  1. I think that your sewing room (or maybe your house!) has a black hole!

    Dan will bring the pillow up to the (not lakeside) cabin the next time he goes up there. It will fit in with the rest of the decor there - deer heads and wild boars mounted on the walls; wild turkey feathers displayed on the wall; coyote, deer, red fox, grey fox, mink, and raccoon pelts draped across various items; and years of hunting pictures hung on the main beam across the cabin.

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    1. Hmmm... The decor sounds – charming. I googled the location and noted it was near a lake, if not truly lakeside. Perhaps if it were lakeside there would also be fish on plaques mounted on the walls as well and fishing lures decorating the table tops.

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  2. I love this post! My son is an avid hunter and he would love a pillow like the one you made. Thanks for this - I'm going to add it to my to do list! It is so cool you added your son's pic to the pillow - he looks just like a serious hunter! :)

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    1. Glad it inspired you. By the way, that second unopened package of the fabric to print on just showed up. The pillow is already in the mail to my son so I am glad I gave up the search and just bought a second package. I am please enough with the way it transferred the image to fabric that I just might keep that second package for other projects. I did print a second photo and I plan to run it through the wash to see how it fairs being laundered. Thanks for visiting and commenting. Happy New Year!

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  3. I love that the deer were unscathed, and the pillow is FANTASTIC!

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    1. Thank you. I am glad all the Bambi's in the woods hid well. I would like to think that secretly my son may have been somewhat relieved as well.

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  4. That looks so good. I may well have to make a similar one, thanks for the inspiration. That block works really well. My son has a thing about deer too, but the quilt I'd finished for him in November couldn't fit into his suitcase but maybe I could post a cushion cover? Thanks for showing us how you did it.

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    1. Good luck if you make a pillow. I was just winging it as I went along but glad I helped a bit. Is there a link to your deer quilt? I am curious.

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  5. What an enjoyable read! I loved hearing all about the making of your deer cushion and your son's adventure. This pillow turned out beautifully and I love the fabrics that you chose. Great job, Diane!

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