Note To Self: This Project Is Cursed

Because I knew I would be traveling in February, I chose a quick project for my project of the month. I completed the unfinished standing pencil case (# 2 on my list) in a single afternoon, but the project was cursed.

Unfinished handmade fabric pencil case laying on a crafting mat. The zipper is cut through on one corner.
Where I started.

I had re-discovered this forgotten project from 2022 while going through my studio storage and making my 2026 POM list. Fortunately, Past-Kit left me a note in case I forgot what had happened (and I had.) The zipper was ruined. Removing it required a bunch of seam ripping, which I couldn’t face at the time. She also told me where to find written instructions. As soon as I opened the indicated notebook, however, I freaked out. There were two and a half pages of mystifying diagrams I’d carefully drawn so I wouldn’t have to re-watch the 19-minute long video that had inspired the project.Ā 

Guess what I wound up doing? Multiple times?

Re-watching the video did explain how I had destroyed the zipper. I had done exactly what the video showed, clipping the curves without checking first to make sure the zipper was sewn in properly. It wasn’t. There were places where it wasn’t caught by the seam at all, so when I clipped my curves up to the seam line, I cut all the way through the zipper. Oops.

A black zipper along the edge of a sewn pencil case disappears into and then reappears from the seam, a sewing mistake.
One of the places where I missed the zipper.
A hand holding a fabric case with a zipper that has been cut right through the teeth.
This is what happens when you clip before you look.

By dumb luck, the zipper I chose for my second attempt made the sewing much easier. Not having a 16-inch black #3 zipper on hand and failing to find one at my favorite crafting supplies thrift store, I went with a gray #5 zipper-by-the-yard already in my stash. Having a higher quality closure seemed more important than using exactly the right color. It didn’t occur to me that the wider tapes would make the sewing easier. I got it right on the first try.

Well, almost. I still had seams to rip. Despite reviewing the video step-by-step, I kept forgetting important details. My seam ripper got a real workout, as did my collection of swear words.

The end was in sight when I got stuck again. I could not get the zipper pull to go on the zipper tape. And I tried. For fifteen minutes I tried, fiddling and taking deep breaths. Thinking there might be a manufacturing problem, I tried three different pulls. None of them worked.

I had watched the how-to video for zippers-by-the-yard earlier, but I had already forgotten what it showed. I’m sure you’ve guessed that I was trying to put the pull on backwards. When I turned it around? Zip. It slid on in two seconds.

As the end of the video cheerily announces, ā€œYou can make it!ā€ And I did. 

A zippered fabric pencil case made from an African animal print fabric and sporting a Curacanti National Recareation Area patch in coordinating colors.
Cursed… but done.

But I’m sorry, Past-Kit. You had plans to make many more of these. You can forget it. Yes, the end results are fantastic. Yes, the case actually stands up. It is going to be a great way to store and use my colored pencils.

A handmade standing fabric pencil case with zipper open to show interior pockets full of drawing utensils.
At least my cursed pencil case stands up.

But this is the one and only standing pencil case I am making. Ever.

Unless I forget the pattern is cursed and try it again some day.Ā 

Which, sadly, sounds just like me.

Note: I do not get compensated in any way for any products or services I mention. Links are provided for your information only.

6 thoughts on “Note To Self: This Project Is Cursed

Add yours

  1. Good for you for finishing the project. I think I would have given up and tried something new, but then I wouldn’t have learned anything. You must have a lot of patience.

    1. It’s not patience so much as determination or even stubbornness. I could either throw it away or finish, and I didn’t want to waste the materials. Throwing away the ruined zipper was bad enough! I could have salvaged the park patch, of course, but still… I’m glad I stuck with it, despite the challenges.

  2. Ah — So needed to hear this……also working on a cursed project! Maybe there’s hope! Thank you!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

The maximum upload file size: 1 MB. You can upload: image. Links to YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and other services inserted in the comment text will be automatically embedded. Drop file here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Create a website or blog at WordPress.com

Up ↑