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dangerbears Dangerbears
Wisconsin
Posts: 6,021
Website

I'm taking a break after stuffing the leg of a big 20" bear (I can easily spend an hour filling each limb of a bear this size), and I'm feeling glad that I figured out something about this part of the bear-making process that I never read in any set of instructions.

When I started making bears, I read in books and patterns that one first filled a limb and then closed it up using the ladder stitch. So I would carefully try to stuff the limb completely and then close up the seam, but inevitably the stuffing would be bulging out through the seam I was trying to close, or else I didn't stuff as firmly or as evenly as I wanted to.

What I do now is to stuff the foot (for example) and lower leg and then the upper part around the joint. Then I start the ladder stitch at the top of the seam, and as I sew, I add stuffing to the parts that still need it. With a stuffing tool, I can add bits of stuffing to any part of the limb--even as the opening gets smaller. By the time I finish closing the seam, I've had complete control over how much stuffing I've inserted and exactly where I've put it. It's a little thing, but it makes me happy.  bear_original

What tips and techniques have you figured out for yourself that have made made your life and your bears better?

Becky

jenny Three O'clock Bears
warwickshire uk
Posts: 4,413
Website

I think I read about doing that in the Ted Menten Book....it's a good plan..I do that now...just loosely sewing and pulling it up almost like a shoe lace and you can keep stuffing  through the stitches. The other way to avoid messy seam closures is to cut a tab that you fold under as you sew .....it just gives you more leeway when closing the opening. ...sometimes the seam allowance is very small and can fray...so adding a bit of extra width just on the openings helps to strengthen..and neaten the closure.

dangerbears Dangerbears
Wisconsin
Posts: 6,021
Website
Pink wrote:

of course you don't stuff a bigger bear with tweezers do you?!

Now THAT would take a long time! bear_laugh

Your tool for inserting glass beads in interesting. Is that meant for pouring sugar?

Becky

gugu"s teddies gugu;s teddies
durban
Posts: 203

hi there i use a funnel  for emptying glass beads into  a tummy it works perfectly as for sewing the seams up before stuffing  ive  been doing it for a long time works perfectly also  stops seams from puckering when you get  to end of closeing off just dont do your ladder stitching to tight as it wont close neatly when pulled

Boogaloo Bears Boogaloo Bears
united kingdom
Posts: 1,096

Ooh what an interesting thread!

I made a small funnel out of card and use a small teaspoon to scoop in and insert steel shot.  I picked up the tip of using chopsticks a while ago from someone on this site and it has been an absolute god send - you can really push in the stuffing if needed  bear_grin

Hugs

Lisa x

karenaus Melbourne
Posts: 694
Website

Ah, I love how great minds think alike! bear_grin I close my seams just how you do, Becky. Even making small bears, it's soooo much easier, and many times when teaching I've noticed people struggling with bulging stuffing til I've suggested they try 'our way' bear_grin
    And Pink, I use those sugar dispensers too, one for glass, one for steel, so handy. Plus they look cute on the workbench. I'd love to find a couple of pretty old ones to use.

cherylsbears cherylsbears
Michigan
Posts: 20

I really admire those of you who make the teeny tiny bears, I may try sometime, but my bears are usually large at 17" or so, smallest have been 7".  I would like to make a 2" bear, that would be teeny tiny for me. http://www.teddy-talk.com/img/smilies/bear_wub.gif

edmondnutmeg Padfield bears
Derbyshire
Posts: 1,343
Website

Hummmm probably my best tip would be to not ignore something you know isn't quite right. It might be a ever so slightly wonky nose or one eye sunk deeper than the other, one limb just that bit higher than the other - you know the kind of thing. You try to persuade yourself  'oh it will be ok when I do so and so'  or 'maybe its just the pile' etc'. It can be very frustrating when your excited about your new bear and can't wait to see it finished. BUT hold your horses it took ages to do and will take ages to be done again but if you don't sort it it out at this point you will never be happy with the end result. Or is this just me?
michelle

tcfolk TC Folk Originals
Tempe, AZ
Posts: 1,553

You are absolutely right, Michelle!  This is a lesson that is hard to learn.  I think most of it fight it all the time!  In fact, I am doing it as we speak, but this time I actually stopped and redid the whole face.  Very happy I did.  When I spot something that I think is not quite right, I ask my husband, Mike, to look at it, but I don't tell him what I think is wrong.  He can spot it all the time!  Then I know it needs fixing. I also use the mirror trick, and take a picture trick, but I can still deceive myself with these methods, so husband trick works best for me!!!

Laura Lynn Teddy Bear Academy
Nicholasville, KY
Posts: 3,653
Website

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Pink the container you use is so much prettier than mine!  I use an old washed out candle oil container. (from my candle making days)  It kind of looks like a frosted condiment bottle  bear_grin

Figartteddy Posts: 14

I read your post edmondnutmeg ( what a lovely name! ) and agree with you so much as even though I am a hobby bearmaker, I do strive to get that perfect finished look on noses mouths and ears etc as it is, after all, what gives the bear character.

Figartteddy Posts: 14

Here is a photo of Millie, a bear I made for my daughter. She is made from Stieff Schulte Mohair, 27mm long windswept in antique pink.

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