Remember when I
finally finished Olivia's nursery? She was like 8 months old. When I was pregnant with her I had grand plans for making all the bedding myself, with a green and pink and brown color scheme. Well, when it came down to it, we moved when she was 6 weeks old, and a friend gave me some baby girl bedding (she had a little girl, but was expecting a little boy) and so I just used what I had been given. It was really cute, and turned out to be close to the same colors I was looking at doing anyway, and Olivia was not the kind of baby that would let me take time to work on projects, so I'm pretty sure that bedding would never have been made, even if I didn't have other bedding to use.
This time around, I was determined to actually make the bedding myself. The only nursery set we own now is the one I used for Olivia, which is definitely too girly for a boy. I had decided I wanted to do a pleated crib skirt, so I started there. I started by looking at different skirts and tutorials on-line for making a skirt. And that's when I happened upon this:
I immediately fell in love. I was planning on making our guest room into the nursery, and the guest room already had the
day bed, and a
roman shade, in colors that would work well with this fabric. Only thing is, I wanted to make my own. And I really didn't want to pay what they were charging. I was pretty sure I was capable of doing all the sewing, but I really wanted that fabric. After making sure Sam was okay with it (it is a floral pattern, and we are having a boy...), I did a search for the fabric. It was on sale at Jo-Ann fabric, 50% off! But when I finally decided on how much I wanted to get (5 yards) and went to order it, and it was out of stock! So, I found it on
fabric.com, and went to order it there - this time, it was also out of stock, but I was able to back-order it. And with a coupon I found, I was able to get it for about the same price I found at Jo-Ann, only I had to get 6 yards. I also found a coordinating print, thanks to the
nursery designer on
babybedding.com. And then I found that print on
Fabric.com too. I thought that it would be fun to have the high contrast chevron print on the inside of the bumper.
Here's what my set looked like in the designer:
Now I just had to wait for the fabric. They sent the chevron right away, but they estimated the
pon pom play print would ship out by Feb. 29th! I was hoping it would come earlier, as I knew my energy level would be a lot lower by then. Thankfully, it came in about a week and a half! I got right to work.
First, I made the skirt. I used some leftover piping from
our bench, and drop cloth fabric for the neutral part. One of the really great things about drop cloth, is it comes with hemmed edges. Makes things so much faster. I used a pre-hemmed edge along the top, where it would be Velcro-ed to the base of the crib. I also used
this tutorial from
Young House Love, which is perfect, since I'll be able to easily shorten the skirt when I move the mattress down. I decided to make 3 pleats along the long side, instead of just one. The only thing I wish was different was the depth of the pleats - I would have made them 4 inches deep instead of 2 if I had to do it over again.
Next, I tackled the bumper. I found lots of different
tutorials on making bumpers. Some said to get the
bumper pads from Jo-Anns, others said batting. And none of the tutorials were exactly what I wanted. Both were going to be a little spendy. Then I had an epiphany. I could use Olivia's old bumper, take it apart, and build the new one with that. And it would be FREE! So I pulled out the trusty old seam ripper, and ripped and ripped and ripped that bumper pad apart. It was really helpful to take it apart, so I could see how it had been put together. I was also able to strip out the cording from the piping on the old bumper, so I could reuse that for the new piping. I put mine together in one long tube, that needed to be turned once all the sewing was done. I detest hand sewing, and this is the only way I could figure out how to minimize the hand sewing. I did have a panicked moment when it was all done, and ready to be turned. I suddenly worried that it would be impossible to turn something that thick and that long. But it worked! Then I just stitched up the one open end, and and did some quilted seams in each corner.


Next was the rocking chair. I had made a
cover for it to go with Olivia's room, so I knew this wouldn't be too hard. Also, if I ever wanted to put it back in Olivia's room, I still had the removable covers I could put back on. This time I wanted to add piping, and I had figured out how to do the arm rests better - last time I tried to do it with snaps, and they were constantly falling off. So this time I decided to try out ties. It worked much better. I also improved the padding in the arms, so the chair is a lot more comfortable. I did the cushions 2 sided - one side with the pon pom play fabric, and once side with the chevron. So, I could flip them over for a new look if I wanted. And the cover is all done to be removable and washable - a must with such a light background!


Then I had to decide where I wanted to use the rest of the fabric. I wanted to do a lampshade, and I had an old one on hand to use. I think if I had to do it over again, I would have just bought a cheap white drum shade. The square one I had used more fabric than I was expecting, but I still like how it turned out. I also spray painted a lamp yellow for the base - I bought a couple of different options at a thrift store, but one was too big, and the other too small. See below.
 |
| Too small. |
 |
| Too big. |
 |
| Just right. |
And so I just ended up going with the one that I already had. Here again, I maybe would have been better off to buy a shade to match one of the lamps. I ended up using the large lamp above in our great room - spray painted avocado green, with a drum shade covered in drop cloth with some brown gross grain trim, but I think that's for a whole new post. For the lamp, I used spray adhesive, and then glue gun to hook it on the inside. This is another DIY project I'm anxious to do again because it was so easy and so satisfying.

A changing pad cover was the next project up. I wanted to make it out of a soft minky fabric, but have it trimmed with pon pom play along the top. It was pretty hard to find the right color, and the blue is a bit brighter than I was hoping for. But this was another really easy project. It was just a matter of doing a seam to put the trim on, and then folding it in quarters, and cutting off a square to create the pocket in each corner. Elastic was added around the bottom, and it was done! I used
this tutorial, in case what I just wrote made no sense. I'll probably need to make a few more of these to have extras when others are dirty.
Next I wanted to do a diaper stacker. This is something that I really liked having hanging above Olivia's changing table, and it didn't look too hard to do. Olivia's diaper stacker had ties at the top to hook to something instead of a hanger, which I found much more practical. So I used her old diaper stacker (which she still uses to hold her pullups in her closet) as a pattern for the one I made for the new baby's nursery. I put some padding in the top, and two ties so it could be hung almost anywhere.
 |
| Before the changing table was done, I just hung it from the end of the crib. |
Finally, I wanted to mimic the
mobile and the embroidery hoops that they have on the babybedding.com site. I had a mobile I used for Olivia - I think I picked it up at a yard sale for a few dollars. It was precious moments, with little stuffed animals hanging from it. But it played a nice traditional lullaby, so I knew it was perfect. The mobile they had on the website seemed easy enough, so I decided to try and make it. I clipped the little animals off, and cut out balloon shapes from my fabric. I hemmed the open edge, and stuffed them with some fiberfill. Then I tied them off with some white grossgrain ribbon. The hardest part was fishing the little strings back through the holes to hang them. Then I made a tulle pom pom to hang from the center, and modge podged some fabric over the precious moments label. Finally, I used the last bit of that silk fabric (from my drapes, the bench, and the piping) to create a sleeve for the arm of the mobile.
As for the embroidery hoops, I looked up a few
tutorials, and found it to be really simple - just a matter of putting the fabric in the hoop, making it nice and taut, and then use a glue gun to secure it to then inside of the hoop. I was running out of fabric by this point, and wish I had just a bit more to do a few more hoops. I just hung them randomly, and how it looks right now is bugging me a bit. I might move them around a bit.

The last thing left is a blanket. This is being machine quilted right now, so it's not done. I just used the pon pom play fabric, with a stripped minky for the back. I'm interested to see how it turns out. Then I'll just need to bind it, and I'll be done! I still want to make a few sheets for the bed, and a couple covers for my boppy, along with those extra changing pad covers.. But I still have 6 weeks before the baby is due, and I think I can manage that. I just love how the room turned out. I sneak away in there at least once a day to rock in the glider or take a power nap on the day bed. It's just so relaxing in there.
Here are some pictures of the room as it is now:
 |
| The rocking horse is one we got for free when Olivia was a baby - it was
teal and purple, and so I thought I'd try spray painting it. I love it
so much now that it's just one solid (pretty) color! Olivia's not too
pleased, but that's another story. |
 |
| I added some little hats to the hooks I used to hang the stacker. I think they're pretty cute up there. |
|
|
Okay, this is the fun part for me. The cost break down compared to if I just bought each item on babybedding.com.
Total fabric costs:
Pon Pom Play - $60
Chevron ZigZag print - $22.50
Blue minky - $4
White minky (quilt) - $7
Batting (for quilt, and diaper stacker) - $10
Tulle - $1
Misc. notions (thread, zippers) - $10
machine quilting: $40
Total: $154.50
Cost on Babybedding.com
Extra long skirt with trim: $129
Bumper: $129
Crib quilt:$119 (and doesn't have professional machine quilting, like mine will)
Changing pad cover: $39
Decorative pillow: $49
Lamp shade: $49
Mobile: $59
Rocking chair pad: $94 (doesn't include ottoman, or arm rests)
Diaper stacker: $44
Total: $711. And it would have been even more for me to customize any of this (with the chevron, for example.) So I feel pretty good about how much time and money I put into it!