Cut Out + Keep

Liberty Peacock Pincushion

Sew an elegant peacock pincushion from Liberty fabric.

https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/liberty-peacock-pincushion • Posted by Quadrille

The peacock, with its iridescent blue feathers and flamboyant tail, is an iconic symbol of the Aesthetic Movement, which appears widely in paintings, jewellery and textile designs of the late nineteenth century. This quirky pincushion may lack the sinuous grace of his Victorian predecessors, but I’m sure that he will prove a useful sewing companion. The ‘eyes’ on his sequinned tail are cut from Liberty’s ‘Caesar’ Tana Lawn, the contemporary reworking of ‘Hera’, Arthur Silver’s 1887 peacock feather furnishing print. Making pattern pieces Trace and cut out paper templates for the body, ?base gusset, three feathers, three feather appliqué pieces, eye and inner eye. Transfer all the markings ?and letters. Cutting out from print for peacock’s body: • Cut 2 rectangles, each 23 x 25cm • Cut 1 base gusset from heavy-weight feather fabric: • Cut 7 large feathers • Cut 6 medium-size feathers • Cut 4 small feathers from appliqué print: When cutting appliqué pieces, centre the template shape on the large, medium-size or small feather motifs in the fabric print. • Cut 7 large feather appliqué pieces • Cut 6 medium-size appliqué feather pieces • Cut 4 small feather appliqué pieces from white felt: • Cut 2 eyes from turquoise felt: • Cut 2 inner eyes

You will need

Project Budget
Cheap

Time

2 h 00

Difficulty

So-so
Medium shot 9  0013 1325871796 Medium shot 9  0023 1325872036

Description

The peacock, with its iridescent blue feathers and flamboyant tail, is an iconic symbol of the Aesthetic Movement, which appears widely in paintings, jewellery and textile designs of the late nineteenth century. This quirky pincushion may lack the sinuous grace of his Victorian predecessors, but I’m sure that he will prove a useful sewing companion. The ‘eyes’ on his sequinned tail are cut from Liberty’s ‘Caesar’ Tana Lawn, the contemporary reworking of ‘Hera’, Arthur Silver’s 1887 peacock feather furnishing print. Making pattern pieces Trace and cut out paper templates for the body, ?base gusset, three feathers, three feather appliqué pieces, eye and inner eye. Transfer all the markings ?and letters. Cutting out from print for peacock’s body: • Cut 2 rectangles, each 23 x 25cm • Cut 1 base gusset from heavy-weight feather fabric: • Cut 7 large feathers • Cut 6 medium-size feathers • Cut 4 small feathers from appliqué print: When cutting appliqué pieces, centre the template shape on the large, medium-size or small feather motifs in the fabric print. • Cut 7 large feather appliqué pieces • Cut 6 medium-size appliqué feather pieces • Cut 4 small feather appliqué pieces from white felt: • Cut 2 eyes from turquoise felt: • Cut 2 inner eyes THE LIBERTY BOOK OF HOME SEWING by LIBERTY, published by Quadrille (£20, hardback). Photos ©KRISTIN PERERS; Text ©LUCINDA GANDERTON.

Instructions

  1. Small peacock pincushion step1 1325872387

    Stitching and cutting out the body Place the two pieces of body fabric together, with right sides together and edges aligned. Pin on the body pattern piece, making sure there is a 1cm margin between the pins and the edge of the template. Working a few reverse stitches at each end of the seam, machine stitch around the back, head and neck between points A and B, as close as possible to the paper. Cut the body out, leaving a 1.5cm seam allowance all around the edge of the paper. Cut tiny notches in the seam allowances in line with C and D on the body piece, then remove the pattern piece.

  2. Small peacock pincushion step2 amend 1325872412

    Adding the gusset Pin one side of the base gusset to the body, with right sides together, matching up the tips of the gusset with points A and B, and matching up the C and D notches. Tack in place from A to C and B to D, leaving C to D open. (The opening between C and D will be used to stuff the body.) Machine stitch 1.5cm from the edge. Stitch the other side of the gusset in place, but pin, tack and stitch along the entire seam line, from A to B.

  3. Small peacock pincushion step3 1325872437

    Trimming the seam allowance Trim the seam allowance to 1cm. To give the curved seams a smooth finish, snip small triangles into the sharpest curves around the head, neck and chest and clip the surplus fabric from the beak and tail, but don’t cut any closer than 3mm or the seams may split. Remove the tacking. Press under the seam allowance along both sides of the opening, then turn the body right side out.

  4. Small peacock pincushion step4 1325872504

    Stuffing the bird Stuff the body firmly with polyester toy filling. Use just a little at a time, so that the bird doesn’t become lumpy and use the eraser end of a pencil to push the fibres right into the head, neck and tail. When the bird is nice and plump, tack the two edges of the opening together, slipstitch closed and remove the tacking.

  5. Small peacock pincushion step5 1325872510

    Preparing the feathers The seven large and six medium-size feathers are all reinforced with wire so that they will stand out proudly. For each one, cut a piece of florist’s wire roughly the same length as the feather appliqué shape. Twist the top into a small loop and stitch the wire to the feather, 2cm down from the top edge. Checking that the bottom of the wire doesn’t protrude, roughly tack the feather appliqué piece over the wire. Tack a feather appliqué piece to each of the four small feathers as well, omitting the wire.

  6. Small peacock pincushion step6 1325872529

    Embroidering the feathers You could simply stitch around the edge of the feather appliqué to secure it in place, but a little simple machine embroidery gives texture and an extra dimension to the tail. Using navy and then turquoise thread, stitch extra fronds either side of the feather spine and around the ‘eye’ (taking care to avoid the wire). If you prefer to embroider by hand, work random straight stitches in the same direction as the printed fronds.

  7. Small peacock pincushion step7 1325872566

    Sewing on the tail Sew the base of the first large feather ?to the body, 2cm down from the tip of the body. Then overlapping the feathers slightly, sew three more large feathers in place on each side, to create a fanned tail. Use long stab stitches and sew from front to back to make the tail really secure. Add the six medium-size feathers so that the ‘eyes’ lie between the large feathers, then add three small ones in between the medium-size feathers. The final small feather goes in the centre.

  8. Small peacock pincushion step8 1325872573

    Adding the finishing touches Sew one white felt eye to each side of the head with small hand stitches, then sew on the inner eyes. Insert a pearl-topped pin in each eye to represent the shiny pupils. Finish off by sewing a sprinkling of translucent sequins across the tail feathers and adding a crest of pearl-topped pins. Stick the rest of the pins into the peacock’s breast to complete his fine plumage.