Honey quickly decided that our pillows were much nicer than her mere blankets. |
For the most part, Honey is fine wandering the house, sleeping on the couch or our bed. But she's grown into a fairly good-sized dog - 61 lbs when I took her to the vet this summer. Sometimes we like to sleep at night without her lying on top of us or having to kick her to let us get some blankets (yes, she hogs the blankets). We also like to sleep through the night, without her waking us up to go outside at 3:30 am. And sometimes she just misbehaves and needs a time-out.
That's what her bed is for. She is crate trained - and honestly doesn't mind being in there at all. The only times she gets upset when I put her in her bed is when she thinks she's missing out on something, or if she's in trouble. I had made a pillow for her bed a few years ago when I first got my sewing machine. It was my very first project, and a little bit sad. It looked fine at first, but then all the stuffing got stomped down and now it's hardly a pillow at all.
So, I finally worked up the energy to make her another pillow. (Please be nice - I'm totally self-trained on the sewing machine, and am very slowly learning!)
First off, I found two pieces of fabric in my stash - whenever I go to a craft store I check out their clearance fabric section to see what I can find. Those two pieces of fabric probably cost me less than $5. The only problem was that they were both super thin - and that worried me. I didn't want Honey's nails to ruin the fabric just through normal use!
So, I got out some batting, and sewed a piece of batting to each piece of fabric, creating a quilted design on each side. The batting became thoroughly attached to the fabric, and made the overall piece much sturdier. I think the batting was about $10, but I've still got most of the package left.
Side One - with diamonds |
Side Two - it's hard to see, but each square is quilted. |
I left a tab on each side of the open seam, and sewed the velcro pieces to the respective fabric pieces. I then used some iron-on stitches to clean it up a bit. It looks a bit rough, and I didn't take any pictures of it, but honestly, I was just winging it. All the messiness is inside the pillow, so as long as it looks good from the outside, that's fine. Right?
I didn't have any stuffing immediately on hand, but was so excited to have a (nearly) finished project that I called Honey over for a photo shoot!
You want me to do what again? |
I'm only here because I love you. In two seconds, I'm going to go see if there's a squirrel outside. |
Rather than pay a bunch of money for bags of stuffing, John and I went to Fred's and bought 4 pillows for $10 and ripped them open. We then stuffed the pillow (the Velcro works wonderfully) and surprised Honey with it!
She wasn't really interested.
Notice: the lack of a dog in this picture. |
So, we moved the pillow into her bed - considering my lack of measurements (I just picked two pieces of cloth that were relatively the same size and cut them to match each other), I'm thrilled to say that the pillow fits her bed perfectly!
Perfection! |
Once it was in her bed, Honey finally took interest and started checking the pillow out. She seemed pleased.
Actually, we bribed her by putting a treat in her bed. She was still too excited to be still. |
Since then, I've noticed Honey going "missing" at random times, and found her curled up on her pillow in her bed. She always gets up quickly when I walk in - so as not to let me think that she likes being in her bed, but over the past 4 days I've walked in on her a good 6-7 times.
I think she likes it!
that dog is realllyyyy adorable.
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