I must direct you over to Lysa Flower; she has been such a generous friend to me and I think ya’ll would love her! I’ve already made her match needle book and have been dying to try one of her foundation piecing projects so this cassette tape pouch was a no-brainer. She is definitely a girl after my own heart! Ahhhh, the 80s:) Let’s look at my cassette pouch, which this time looks a little English Cottage inspired I’ve now noticed:
After letting me test the needle book pattern, she asked if I would like to test the cassette tape one. Of course I yelled “yes!” and was giddy with excitement, but I was also burdened by teaching and couldn’t sew anything. It was misery. I held on to the pattern though, and it was always at the top of my Creative Inbox for when I was ready. (I have many cool project ideas in that box and often wonder if my lifetime will be long enough.)
I was at first daunted by it because I have very little skill in paper piecing. Until this project, I had only done a butterfly from a Craftsy project – the Undercover Maker Mat, and a practice run with another Craftsy project – Rose Paper Piecing. I was so stoked to get started with the cassette after that but other things came up, and I didn’t have any sufficient space to play with fabrics with everything else Boy and I had going on.
Then I decided that Boy and I rarely eat at the dining room table, which I recently inherited. It belonged to my gramma and grampa, and gets tremendously long with two full size leaves. I took it over. No food allowed! It is now a beautiful chaotic mess. I need to learn to be less messy as once it becomes this crazy, my creativity tanks.
Well, anyway, I made many mistakes making my first cassette pouch, so I had to come up with my own ingenuity to try to solve them. I mostly succeeded but failed in one critical aspect: my MP3 player for which I built it did not easily fit. I did enjoy my additions though, so those ideas twirled around in my head for a bit until I had a chance to recreate it.
The first thing I wanted was a small pocket for my gym membership card, since this was the primary purpose of Boy getting me the MP3 player in the first place. The pocket is big enough to suit my ID and/or credit cards also if needed.
The original cassette pouch did not work in size because of the zipper. I attempted to negate that by removing the zipper but it was still an issue. Of course I could make the whole thing larger, but I really liked how small it was overall, and other than getting the MP3 player in and out, it was a perfect size. So I decided in Round Two to skip the modified zipper closure all together. In my first creation, I added a flap that fit through the “zipper” opening, so I widened it in this version to the full length of the cassette.
The first cassette pouch also had a cool wrist strap that doubled as a secure closure method and looked like unwound tape. Love it! So in this version, I tweaked it a little to be easier to maneuver. It looks more realistic in the original, but this way is better for functionality. The strap slips through a little hole in the bottom.
But if I don’t need to secure the pouch all the way, I can just fold it around the outside.
Because the MP3 player can connect to my car, I don’t always need the headphones out, so I wanted them stashed separately. This would also help with securing the wrist strap through the bottom, rather than the flap getting hung up on the cord. I made a secret pocket in the flap of the bag I made for my last Peru trip to hold a copy of my passport and some extra cash, so I employed that here. A side note: I still owe a post about that amazing bag! What?! (I want to make another so maybe now that I’ve spread my fabric wings again, you’ll see it soon!)
When making my first “prototype”, I wondered if I couldn’t add in a little hole for the earphones, so that the MP3 player could be protected in the pouch while listening to it. It was a lot of work, but I got it figured out!
The image above also shows that the cassette pouch stands up on its own. I added two layers of medium weight interfacing for the flap, and for the pouch itself (front, back, sides, and bottom), I added fusible fleece lining for added protection. Boy’s well-spent money won’t go to waste should I drop my “boom box” (“boom box” is easier and more fun to say than MP3 player!).
Cassette tapes were fun because you could write on them and, duh, make mixed tapes. I decided to embroidery a little thing that one of my first high school crushes wrote me: INVU4URAQT. It took me quite a while to puzzle that out as I recall, and let’s just say it didn’t help quench the crush.
Lysa loves using selvages, as many sewers do, but most of my stash is either sans selvage or it just has a website or something, nothing like cool or cute phrases. But then I found “COPYRIGHT PROTECTED” and I thought, how á propos! Cassettes were the epitome of copying music! I recall cassettes also had weird numbers or something on them so I found a selvage with matching colors that finish it off. I thought about adding buttons to this side also, where the little roller things would be, but I decided against it. I knew this would go into a pocket more often than not, so I didn’t want anything to catch.
I love this little cassette pouch. Boy teases me that I love it more than his MP3 player gift. I can’t help it, it is such a clever design by Lysa and so perfect in its purpose.
it looks fantastic, you did a great job!
Thanks, Wendy! I am a little disappointed with the color scheme – I am still new to color theory in quilting. But it’s ok because that just gives me an excuse to make another one;)
This is SO brilliant! You’ve blown my mind. I LOVE the inventiveness of it all!
Aww, that is quite the compliment coming from you Lysa! Couldn’t have done it without your clever design!!! :D:D