https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/shakespeare-plushy • Posted by HotPinkCrayola
I've been working in the English department of a high school for the last year, and left today because I'm starting teacher training as a textiles teacher. I decided to make a mascot for the department to say thank you and goodbye, and who better than Shakespeare? This is all my own pattern, and would be a great thank you or goodbye gift for a special teacher. The pieces are included as a download - make sure you print them A4 to get a plushy about 6"/15cm tall. There looks to be a lot of steps and there is, but only because I took so many photos to make sure the project is really clear. The actual making isn't too hard and could be achieved even without a sewing machine by an amateur sewer.
I've been working in the English department of a high school for the last year, and left today because I'm starting teacher training as a textiles teacher. I decided to make a mascot for the department to say thank you and goodbye, and who better than Shakespeare? This is all my own pattern, and would be a great thank you or goodbye gift for a special teacher. The pieces are included as a download - make sure you print them A4 to get a plushy about 6"/15cm tall. There looks to be a lot of steps and there is, but only because I took so many photos to make sure the project is really clear. The actual making isn't too hard and could be achieved even without a sewing machine by an amateur sewer.
Cut your 6 base pieces.
Sew two together down one side only of the oval.
Add your next piece to the other side of the oval and sew. When you open them out they should look like this. Keep adding ovals until all six are sewn in a line, then sew the last on to the first, leaving a gap of one inch for turning.
Turn right-side out through the gap and you'll have a very deflated looking oval ball. Check all the corners have been sewn together at this point, because you can unturn it and correct if not!
Stuff it until round and firm. This might take some squidging to achieve the correct shape, but it should look a bit squashed anyway. Sew up the hole and put the base to one side.
Grab your body, fold in half width ways, and sew the two ends together. Turn right way out.
Gather the top of the body (sew a loose line of running stitches round the top edge, yank the ends until the hole closes, and sew closed).
Hand sew the body on to the base. Make sure to leave a gap to stuff the body firmly, then once stuffed finish the stitching.
Cut out your six head pieces and make the head in exactly the same way as you made the base (this will turn out a flatter ball and require less squidging).
Sew the head to the body. It may look a little out of proportion at this point - don't worry, it does turn out balanced at the end! Pop your body to one side and grab your hair bits.
A note on the hair - the pattern says cut four or six bits. I only used four in the end, but there are gaps left between, so if you prefer you can overlap them when sewing on and have six. It's untested though, so may not look quite right.
Wrap the bottom of the hair strip around your index finger, and pin in place. This makes a curl. Catch the end with a small stitch...
...and it should look like this!
Sew the hair to the head by placing it where you want it, then flipping it over length ways so the curl faces down and sew in place.
Then flip your hair back on itself and the curl is the right way up. (Please ask if these two steps don't make sense and I'll try to explain it better).
Sew all four or six hair strips on in this way. They will stick out at a funny angle, which we'll fix next step.
Pinch two sections of the hair together at the curls and sew a stitch to keep them together (use brown thread - I used white just to show you what I meant and replaced it after the photo). Do this for every edge that can touch another (so three stitches). You can de-poof the hair to hide the gaps when they're all sewn together.
Here's what the sewn down hair looks like. Put your work so far to one side, and grab your arm and hand pieces.
Sew the hand to the arm as shown - when you flip the hand out it has a smooth seam, it's not backwards.
Fold your arm in half length ways, keeping that hand seam on the outside, and sew down the long edge right to the fold of the hand. Leave the end of the sleeve open.
Turn your arm (use closed, round ended scissors to help), stuff, and sew the end closed flat.
Sew your arms in place on the side of the body.
With both arms sewn on, Shakespeare looks like he's having a stretch. They'll be brought into line with the scroll later so don't worry. He should look a bit more in proportion now too.
While you can still get to his face, use a few little scraps of brown felt to sew on as a pointy beard and moustache. (No pattern pieces for these because they're really small - they could be drawn on if you'd prefer too).
Cut out your ruff/ collar pattern piece. Make sure it's a horseshoe, and you've cut the bottom apart.
Slip the ruff around his chin and sew in place.
Close up on the sewing so you can see the type of stitch to use (hopefully). Pop him to one side again.
Get your quill bit now. You need to stick a small strip of black card down the centre to give it some solidity, and then snip round the edge to feather the felt. Ruffle it a bit when you're done so it's not too clean cut.
Sew the quill to one hand. I chose his left (from his POV) but you can do whichever.
Grab your scroll strip, and curl the ends in the same way as you did his hair.
Sew to both hands so he looks like he's holding it.
Grab the white fabric paint (I used 3D fabric paint in a tube, but regular should work ok). Draw the shirt details (two 'seams' and three buttons) and put two blobs on the face as eyes.
With the black fabric paint, drop some pupils into the eyes, and add eyebrows, a nose and a mouth. Leave these to dry overnight before you do the next step, just to avoid accidental smudging. The pupils may spread - mine did.
Finish Shakespeare off with some relevant scroll text. 'Thank thee!' seemed appropriately Shakespearian, but you could do anything, such as a famous Shakespeare quote, or a more personal message. Depends if it's a gift for someone else or for you to keep.
And that's it. One Shakespeare - mine got given to my colleagues with a selection of goodies and was received with lots of cooing and two commissions - result :)