Showing posts with label Denim. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Denim. Show all posts

Sunday, August 31, 2025

Okayama

I realised that I talk a lot about where we are and if you aren't familiar with Japan, it can be a little confusing, so here is a rough map. We started our time in Tokyo and then went down/west to Nagoya (about three hours on the shinkansen). You can see Japan has four main islands that I've labeled too, which will make more sense when I talk about where we go after Okayama. 


Next stop on our journey was Okayama, which is to the west of Nagoya. The shinkansen only took an hour and a half to get here. This is a largish port city along the south coast of Japan's main island (Honshu). 


I love traveling via shinkansen especially because you can get great lunches to eat on them from the station before you go. I was sorely tempted by these kids ones that come in reusable shinkansen style lunch boxes. 


After leaving Tokyo, we had noticed a significant difference in the demographic of tourists. Tokyo had been full of every kind of person; German, French, Indian, Aussie, American, etc. Nagoya had a stack load of Chinese tourists along with the European mix. Coming to Okayama was different again; we only saw very few foreign tourists here. It was still a big city though, so easy to get lost in. Strangely, even though the tourist numbers were fewer, the local department store could have been Australian there was so much English around. Every shop had an English name, from the typical ones like Subway and Starbucks to other random ones like Strawberryholic and Wego. 


Our first stop on day one was to visit Okayama Castle and the gardens there. We wandered through the gardens first, trying to do outside things before the day heated up too much and we needed to retreat to aircon. The gardens were nice enough, but I wouldn't actually rate them too highly (even though they are on some "Top Ten Gardens in Japan" list). 


There were actually a number of light displays set up for illumination in the evening, so maybe it would have been better to come back then. Oh well! We had fun wandering around the various parts and enjoying the views. 


Okayama is famous for its fruit, so I picked up this peach mochi to enjoy there and it was delicious. Then we went into the grounds of Okayama castle. No idea why these enormous fish were on display, but it was likely some festival had just happened. 


The castle was pretty fun because they had a Pokemon event running with lots of cutout Pokemon displayed. Rachel picked up a sheet at the gate that she filled out as we visited each one. You had to write in the names of the Pokemon you found and then use certain letters of each name to answer a question. At the end, you handed in your sheet and got a sticker for your troubles. 


The castle looked cool from the outside, and different to other castles we had seen (like Himeji Castle last year), because the outside was panels of wood painted the dark colour. The castle (and the outer buildings) had been completely destroyed in 1945 but the main building had been rebuilt. They had a model of what it all would have looked like pre-destruction, and it was cool to see all the different buildings that would have filled the now open spaces. 


Inside was five floors of museum that you could take your time walking through. They had a number of displays that were interactive, like this box (below) used for carrying nobles around. There was some support for English (QR codes that you could scan), but not on every item, so it was a little harder to engage when you couldn't read what it was all about. 


And the view from the top was pretty good too. Okayama castle seems to sport a very similar gold fish to Nagoya


The air-conditioning of the castle was nice, when we went back outside it was heat city again. So we stopped in to do an hour of karaoke on our way home. Lots of fun singing in the cool aircon. If you are ever in Japan in the summer, I can recommend karaoke as a way to avoid the heat. 

The next day we went to Kurashiki, which was about twenty minutes from Okayama on the train. Kurashiki is an area known for its traditional indigo dying, and when Japan became obsessed with jeans, it was a big production base. As a result, there are all sorts of denim shops clustered together in Denim Street. You can also get a blue soft serve "denim" ice cream. Which we did. 


It tasted mostly of blue Powerade, but was a cool snack on another hot-ish day. I was tempted by the denim, but didn't buy any, still thinking about how heavy our bags were and how far we still had to go with them. We wandered around the area, enjoying the smaller town vibes and old school streets of low Japanese style houses with tiled roofs. 


Okayama is where the story of Momotaro, or the Peach Boy, was originally from, so there was loads of Momotaro things all around too. We went into a Momotaro museum, I was hoping to get pictures and different versions of the story for classroom resources. What it was instead was an optical illusion museum with a Momotaro theme. 


A little strange, but the girls and Steve had lots of fun with all the illusions and tricks. We picked up some Momotaro themed kibidango which is a rice ball sweet similar to mochi that the area is known for. These were delicious and I wished we had more of them. Then we headed back to our hotel in Okayama for a chilled afternoon of D&D playing. 

To be honest, our accomodation here was not to best. It was a pretty standard business hotel, but at one stage must have been fine for people to smoke in. I guess maybe you still can smoke in some of the rooms, because the cigarette smell was quite strong. Steve and I tuned it out pretty quickly, but the girls are so not used to any kind of smoke, and they made their discomfort very clear. 

Anyway, we managed to survive another night there. Steve and I went and picked up a hire car in the morning for our next adventure, which gave us a rather delightful break from carrying all the bags around on trains. Stay tuned! 

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Denim Apron

A long time ago, when Sophie was only eight months old, I made aprons out of old denim jeans that we had lying around. Obviously she wasn't going to use them then, but I figured she'd grown into them eventually. Here we are, seven years later, and the denim aprons are getting their use at last. I thought I was organised with the Easter Dresses this year, but the aprons got a much larger head start.


Anyway, my sister Sarah was around one day and noticed the aprons hanging up on the hook outside and told me immediately that she would like one. Was that in invitation to use up more stashed denim and sew? One can only say yes.


So I did. I had a pair of jeans and a pair of shorts ready to go. If you are interested in making a denim apron, I realize my first post has less than ample instructions, and this one probably won't either, but feel free to leave a comment if you want to know more. Maybe I can be pursued to divulge more information for the people of the internet.


Denim aprons are super satisfying, completely functional and ethicially fabulous. Everyone should have one. 

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Denim

At the sewing machine again.


I actually had started this what feels like ages ago. It was week one or two of term (so back in July), and I was wandering around the house looking for something to do. With all of my assessment submitted (still haven't had everything marked yet), and all the kids settling into term really well, I didn't have anything to do! Madness!

Anyway, I promptly spent two weeks of spare nights cutting up jeans and shorts for another jeans quilt. Again, I'm working through carefully hoarded, I mean, collected, material and getting rid of stuff by actually using it, rather than letting it get dusty. I wish I had counted how many I cut up, because there were a lot. This one will be bigger than the other two, because I'm are aiming for it to fit the queen bed, rather than a single.

Anyway, after the cutting and measuring and recutting and remeasuring was done, it all sat around for a few weeks while I procrastinated. I didn't really have enough space to lay out the squares to get an idea of how it might come together, so I waited until I went to my parents place and did it there. Then it lay around for another couple of weeks while I procrastinated some more. This time I was thinking that it was going to take ages to sew everything together and I couldn't possibly do it while the kids were here because they would surely mess up the pattern and my layout etc.

Finally I bit the bullet. Steve was going to be out one night and I really wanted to get the pile of fabric out of the way before the kids did decide to investigate the bag it was in, on the floor, in the dinning room. And when I started, I got it done in about an hour and a half of sewing. Which is not long at all.

Despite that, it's not big enough. It needs at least another two strips of squares. I did a look through to see if I had any jeans left. I do, though the final two strips won't be as full of variety as the rest, because they will probably be out of the the same pairs of jeans, unless I want to unpick some of the other strips, which, let's be honest, is never high on the agenda. Anyway, maybe I'll put the half-completed-but-at-least-sewn-together quilt top away and procrastinate some more. I seem to have given myself some kind of wrist injury or RSI from being an parent-type-adult and I should probably rest it some more before I go cutting up things and doing more damage.

Sunday, June 04, 2017

Strawberry Print Denim

Once upon a time there was a pair of strawberry print denim pants that were never worn. They were carefully made by a loving mother, but alas, they never went past the drawer. Poor strawberry print denim pants. They never knew their father! Well, maybe they did, but that's beside the point.


The pants languished, far from the light of day. They travelled from drawer to drawer, but never left long enough to be worn. Until one day, another mother pulled them from their obscurity, and looked at them with a new light. 

Maybe, just maybe, this strawberry print denim was never meant to be pants at all. Maybe, if the strawberry print denim took a new and different from, it could reach and fulfil it's potential. No more would it be left in a drawer, but actually taken out and worn! 


So, with a new vision for the strawberry print denim, the mother carefully cut, pinned and sewed. Low and behold, the strawberry print denim became new! No longer confined to a life on unworn pants, but a pinafore dress with pockets! 


Unfortunately, despite now being a fabulous strawberry print denim pinafore dress with pockets, it still languishes. Though the mother tried to make a size three strawberry print denim pinafore dress with pockets, the end result was closer to a size five. And the almost size five child that lives in the house did not like the strawberry print denim pinafore dress with pockets, for reasons completely unknown.


And so the strawberry print denim pinafore dress with pockets waits some more. Until the little three year old girl who lives in the house that it was originally made for grows up just a little bit more. Then maybe it will get to see some of the brilliant light of day.

On a side note, the mother made the strawberry print denim pinafore dress with pockets out of the red material that turns every thing else red if you wash it in the washing machine together with other things. Luckily for everyone, the mother also remembered this before any colour changing washing occurred and managed to wash the strawberry print denim pinafore dress with pockets separately so it will not be responsible for any colour changing incidents in the future.

The end.

Tuesday, October 04, 2016

Denim Quilt

Notice I'm not calling it a Jeans Quilt? Because that would say it's similar to the other Jeans Quilts that have come before (see here and here). When in fact, it is not. It's still made of jeans, but also other stuff. And made in a different way. Thus, a different name.

Anyway. So you notice you have a pile of jeans like this lying around the house (or, more accurately, stashed in a cupboard, growing at an increasingly rapid rate). What to do, what to do!?


What else, but make a quilt! (Actually, there is loads of other things you can do with denim (see?), but quilts use lots of jeans in one go, which was the goal here.)



Anyway, I wish (as always) I'd taken more photos of the progress, but pretty much, you cut loads of circles out of denim and lots of squares of scrap fabric. You sew the circles together first and then put the squares of fabric in the middle. The way it all works out, the good side of the denim is the back of the quilt and the fabric side is the top. 


For this reason, this is a really cheep quilt to make. Because you don't need to buy batting (the stuff in the middle of the quilt), or binding, or backing fabric (which tends to be quite expensive because it's generally got to be quite large). Obviously it's not as warm as a quilt with batting in it, but because of the denim, it's still heavy and thus warm. 


This was the moment when I realised that even though I'd cut 120 circles and squares, I still needed twenty more of each, because the quilt just looked too short. Sigh. On the plus side, this is what the girls looked like at that point:


Which meant that getting the final bits cut and sewn wasn't actually that painful. Rachel did rouse herself to help me with the pins and sew parts as well. Sewing the squares in involves folding the flaps of the circles onto the squares and sewing around them. It gives the back of the quilt this fun floral circle pattern, which is nice.



It was hard to get a photo of this, not only because it is big, but also because when the girls saw what I was doing this happened:


I was running short on time and lighting (it was 4:45pm!) but I hope you get the idea.


I love looking at all the different scrap fabrics, again so much given to me by others! And some with long history - there is a scrap of fabric from the boxer shorts I made in grade eight Home Ec class! Yikes!


Ah fabric. From my mum, my friends, random strangers even! Fabric that I've seen the girls wear in dresses, or have used for their books, or bunting. Fabric that mum has in table cloths, or made me dresses when I was little.


Ok, I'll stop being nostalgic now and move on with life. Quilt made. Hope you like it.

Friday, September 30, 2016

Denim Again

Making another quilt. With denim. Yes! 


It was holidays, and I had seen an idea for this online, and I knew the amount of jeans I had horded, I mean stashed, I mean saved carefully for purposes such as this, was actually getting to be a little large. Culling had to be done! And it has.

Stay tuned for more quilting updates!

Monday, December 21, 2015

Memory Game


Another thing I made for the travel trip to Bundy was this awesome memory game. It was really perfect for Sophie to play with while Rachel was asleep. She understood the matching concept and had enough memory to actually play to win.


I had the jeans squares cut out already (I guess last time I made a quilt I cut too many (actually, I just had a look for the quilt that I would have cut them for and it's from August 2013! Yikes!) and then used some left over bed sheet scraps from the ABC Book. I used an old fleece Jetstar blanket that I had lying around for the batting and then just fun scrap material for the squares.


The exciting thing about these is that Rachel sewed with me for the first time when I was making them. Yep, Rachel sat on my knee while I sewed the straight lines and then helped push the reverse button and lift the presser foot. She didn’t last long, but she did sew with me. Yay!


Sophie helped with the zig zags on the edges sewing it all together. Fun times. I love these. They are a great way to use up my scrap fabric and were a quick sew. I might be making many more sets of these as presents in the future. Yes!


Thursday, August 29, 2013

Denim Aprons

Today's great new discoveries: Jeans can make more than a quilt and I can finish things I start. :)


I've made two fun aprons for future kids to wear while doing crazy dirty kid stuff like painting. It's just a leg of jeans that was split open and then the pocket reattached. I had a heap of waistbands left over from when I cut up all the other jeans for the jeans quilt, so I used them for the neck band and waist tie. I love the way the buttons and holes all clip in together. :) They are big for kids (they fit me around the waist easily) but you can just put some knots in the bands and hey presto, it's smaller! 

Now onto finishing some other things on the to-do list, the first of which is some things for Christmas presents, which of course, means I can't post about them without giving away the surprise. Expect radio silence from me for a while I guess. :P