Repurposing old clothes as pouches

You know I like a pouch or two, and you’ve probably worked out that I don’t really like to throw things away if they still have another use in them. Today I’m sharing a couple of recent makes which combines both of those, and I’m very happy with the outcomes, and hopefully you’ll be persuaded to try projects with clothes you have loved too.

T-shirt to project bag

I really loved this Joules t-shirt and was happy to rediscover it in my wardrobe this summer, but really it was long past its best to wear - even for gardening, and so it was retired briefly. But I kept seeing it in the corner of my craft room, and I knew that if I didn’t cut it up soon then it might very well make its way back into my wardrobe.

So I had a look through the rest of my scraps, and in particular the old clothes that I’d already cut up before we moved and found the remnants of an old brightly coloured Phase 8 tunic which made the perfect pairing. Once again I loosely followed the instructions for the vinyl fronted pouches, but without the vinyl front and supersized.

I wanted to keep the embroidered Joules logo, and so cut the front of my new project bag from the back of the t-shirt. As I was sewing I realised that I also wanted to see snippets of the fabric I’d chosen for the lining, which if I’m honest looks better as this pouch rather than with the brown trousers I regularly used to pair it with for the office!

That meant I needed to add a strip of the lining fabric to the back section of the project bag to be, so that when I turned the surplus fabric over to encapsulate the rough edges it would be on display. Mission accomplished, and a few decorative splashes of zigzag additions to bolster some of the seams and I was done.

I told you the lining was bright, didn’t I? I’ve immediately put this project bag to use and its currently storing a selection of fabrics for a future make I’m contemplating - in fact it came with me to my patchwork group like this, and after lots of playing around testing out the placements of fabric it came home looking pretty much the same, but with the added ideas and advice from more experienced quilters than me.

I’ve a feeling this will be a small make for the new year unless I have a burst of inspiration, time and inclination!

Geometrical yo-yo storage

The second pouch is one that I’ve made this week to solve a specific problem (not really a problem, but it’s definitely solved). The material I’ve used was once a vest top, and unusually for me is more coordinating than contrasting, well on the outside anyway.

I wasn’t sure how this fabric would sew as it’s quite stretchy, so instead of using another t-shirt I had in mind I opted for this contrasting batik fabric which I’m sure I bought back at one of the larger shows I went to in London and was well due a sewing outing.

The problem it needed to solve was to provide a home for my giant yo-yo maker (well it’s the biggest one I have), which as you can see was struggling to fit into one of the pouches from the recent batch I’d made.

And it does - phew. The maths had me doubting myself at one or more points, but my reasoning for adjusting the original pattern instructions worked out ok.

I even added some of the rolled hem detailing to the bottom of the pouch as a reminder of its previous purpose. And I smiled to myself as I put the completed pouch back in its new home, wondering if my choices has been influenced at all by the wicker basket this time round…

But what’s even better is that I’ve still some of this fabric left, and I have the trimmings which are now very happily wound together and sitting in my waste weaving pile, no doubt they’ll show up in another project one day!

Jo Avery's bright and brilliant improv quilts

In addition to the many, many quilts on display at the Festival of Quilts there’s also galleries dotted around the exhibition space, and one of my favourites was Jo Avery’s Textile Gallery. I love her brightly coloured bold quilts and it was great to see them up close and first hand.

The gallery was in celebration of Jo’s new book - Journey to the Centre of a Quilter in which she shares her inspiration and the importance of play. I don’t have the book, but it’s definitely a contender for my Christmas List - though I’m under no illusion that my quilts would ever be as fabulous as these, though I think they’d have their own level of fabulousness!

JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

Even in these smaller spaces the walls were loaded with quilts, and it was hard to know where to look, or where to start but my feet led me to those that most appealed to me, funny how that happens when our brains aren’t sure isn’t it?

JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

What caught my eye about the quilt above is the detail in the quilting, which stands out with the light thread on the dark background. And then looking at the main motif, and seeing the amount of detail there too. Totally mind blown.

I loved the improv quilt below, and then loved it even more when I saw it was called Jukebox.

JUKEBOX, JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

But again the detail is mind blowing, and the size of this one - it’s 142cm by 217cm - and actually reminds me of a jukebox we had in our childhood home, which was I’m sure, equally as big.

JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

What Jo’s quilts made me realise was how simple shapes repeated can be so effective, and look anything but simple as the quilts above and below both demonstrate.

JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

And when those shapes are repeated and mixed with other shapes such as the houses or the wavy landscapes below, they become something truly fantastic.

POPLARS, JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

This one brought me straight back to that time I tried quilting in a circle, which was one of the most stressful quilting sessions I’ve had so far, but this one makes me want to try again. Though on a much smaller scale!

JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

What I also liked is how Jo’s style of quilting also works for flower shapes, and this Dream Flower quilt below is stunning in its boldness - I’d say simplicity, but there is nothing simple about the detail here, as each petal contains a different improv pieced or organic applique pattern.

DREAM FLOWER, JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

The last quilt I’m sharing here today is this Giant Trilobite (which are extinct marine arthropods - I just had to Google it) and once again it features the bright colours, the circles and more improv pieced and needle-turn applique patterned segments.

GIANT TRILOBITE, JO AVERY’S TEXTILE GALLERY, FESTIVAL OF QUILTS 2025

Aren’t they all amazing?

If you enjoyed this post from my visit to the Festival of Quilts 2025 then please do check out my other posts from the show. Even though my mind was blown by the sheer volume of quilts on display, I’m pretty sure I’ll be going again!

Celebrating flora in the Gargano Peninsula

One of the features and highlights across all of our walks exploring (a very small part of) the Gargano Peninsula was the flora we encountered along the way. In my posts from each walk I’ve shared some of that, but I’ve so much more to share and that’s what I’m going to touch on today. I’ve picked my absolute favourite photos from many, many more and while I don’t necessarily know what every plant is, I know they are all beautiful, sometimes quite different ways.

You’ll not be surprised to learn that the majority of my photos, and those in this post, come from the most challenging walk of the holiday - the one where we went down, up and up some more! But as hard as I found the walk, especially the last of the ups and I absolutely wouldn’t want to do it again, it was also amazing and I’m glad we did it. I’m even more glad we completed it before the rain came!

A sharp spiky thistle with purple flower you wouldn't want to mess with
possibly fennel seedheads - lime green and complete with a bug or two
The hardy Cistus growing amongst rocks, but still flowering (just one mind!)
Two pine cones among the bare branches, all greyed with the weather and silver lichen
A great big puff ball of a plant - think at least 3 times the size of a dandelion
Honeysuck with its delicate dancing trendils

But it wasn’t just that walk, as we walked back down to the coast the next day these lilies growing alongside the roadside were stunning, as were the hibiscus growing through another wire mesh fence much later in the day.

A mass of white lilies behind a mesh fence, not sure if that's for their safety or mine!
Another mesh fence, this time with a possibly hibiscus flowering through it - yellow flowers and long scarlet tendrils

Our last hotel also had impressive grounds, and glorious plants including long time favourites of mine, the passion flower and red hot pokers.

A single passion fruit flower
five stems of red hot poker flowers with a spikier than usual looking base
A pale blue head of a flower, not a hydrangea but that kind of shape

The scent too as we left the main complex and walked back to our room was absolutely divine. It’s true that many things make a great holiday, and this had everything we could have wanted, so if you get the chance to explore for yourself then most definitely go.