Fashion

Santa Claus in tilde style pattern. Tilda Santa with a deer. Detailed master class from Tildamaster. Tilda Santa and Tilda Deer. Master class from Tildamaster

Santa Claus in tilde style pattern.  Tilda Santa with a deer.  Detailed master class from Tildamaster.  Tilda Santa and Tilda Deer.  Master class from Tildamaster

This wonderful quilted Santa Claus with cute applique will take a lot of time to make, but it will be worth it, because the toy will delight your family every year, passed down from generation to generation.

If you want to simplify the process of making a doll, you can use interlining to attach the applique instead of stitching on batting. Then the trousers and jacket will be slightly wider than his figure.

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Print it out pattern of our tilde Santa Claus in the right size.

Materials

  • Various fabrics
  • Non-woven fabric (optional)
  • Batting
  • 6 different buttons
  • Small loop or metal ring
  • Glue stick or glue gun
  • Long thin needle
  • Hand sewing thread
  • Wooden stick with a sharp tip
  • Tweezers
  • Printing material

Master class on Tilda Santa

Torso

Fold a piece of fabric in half so large that it can accommodate the figurine’s torso, arms and legs twice. Iron the fabric.

Lay out the pattern. Draw the torso, two arms and two legs.

Sew around the pattern pieces, paying attention to the location of the holes for turning the fabric inside out. There should be two open holes at the bottom of the base, although you will need to make small seams to hold the fabric together. Cut out the details of the figure.

Place the holes of the parts to the holes of the body so that the seams are one under the other. Make a seam at each hole to create the base of the toy.

Turn all pieces of the product outward and iron it with an iron. Carefully fill in the details of the Santa Claus tilde.
Fold the remaining seam allowances around the holes at the top of the arms and sew them to the shoulders.

Fold the seam allowances left at the bottom of the body, attach the figure's legs to them and sew them to the body. See the drawing to complete the doll. The stitches around the arms and legs will be hidden under clothing.

Cloth

This tilde Santa Claus is sewn so that it is hung somewhere, not planted. This means you only need to quilt the front of your toy's jacket, pants, and hat. The sleeves can be quilted both front and back, as they are sewn from one piece of fabric and folded so that the reverse side comes to the fore.

Start by printing and assembling the pieces for the front of the jacket. Then print the details for the sleeves, pants and hat.
Place the jacket pattern under the well-ironed fabric and trace all parts of the applique along the outline. Repeat the same for the front of the hat, four legs and two sleeves where the appliqué is to be made.

Then draw and cut out the pieces for the back of the jacket and hat. Please note that the hat bends downwards on the back side and upwards on the front side. Cut out all the applique pieces. The same shapes can be used several times, so you can cut the right piece once for each size.

Make an applique on the front of the jacket as shown in the picture.

On sleeves and legs, the edges of the appliqué should be nested and sewn into the bottom seams that hold the legs and sleeves together. Leave enough room for folding on both sides.

Fold and glue the folded edges around the template and stitch only the back of the fabric. Remove the paper and stitch until the seam allowances fit into place. A thin dotted line indicates the edges of the template.

Gather together the fronts, batting pieces, and backs of each piece. Assemble the jacket and hat pieces in the same way, although they will not have appliqué on them. You should end up with two jacket pieces, two hat pieces, four pant legs, and two sleeves, including the batting and back pieces.

Quilt the front of the jacket and hat, two opposite parts of the trousers and sleeves. Stitching is done only inside each part of the costume. If desired, you can quilt other parts.

Once the required garment pieces are complete, trim 1 cm (3/8 inch) from the seam allowance outside the pattern tilde line so that the pieces can be sewn together.

Jacket

Place the front and back of the jacket together and sew at the shoulders. Overlap and baste the sleeves.

Fold the jacket right sides together. Sew the sleeves to each side. Sew away from the quilting seams you made.


Trim the seam allowances under the sleeves and throughout the jacket, leaving 5 - 6 mm (1/ inch). Turn the jacket inside out.

Cut a long strip 6 cm (2.1/4 in) wide for the piping along the bottom of the jacket and iron it by folding it in half, wrong sides facing in. Place the open edge of the jacket opposite the other and stitch approximately 1 cm (3/8 inch) from the edge. Fold the edge of the entire jacket and insert the piping inside.

Process the hole around the neck in the same way, leaving a narrower edge. Cut a strip 3 cm (1.1/4 in) wide, fold it in half and attach it in the same way as you did at the bottom of the jacket (about 5 mm (1/4 in)). Fold the piping around the neck opening and sew with on the inside of the jacket. You don’t have to do this, as the hole will be hidden by the beard of Santa Claus (Father Frost).

Simply fold and iron the unstitched edges at the bottom of the sleeves. If you want to sew them in place, the easiest way to do this is by turning the jacket inside out, folding the edges of the seams and stitching them together before turning the pieces right side out.

Trousers

Sew the two pieces of trousers folded in half together and sew them wrong sides together to the body of the figurine.

If you only have two quilted pieces for the front side, they should be sewn together.
Place the pieces of trousers sewn together on top of each other, sew along the sides and between the legs.

Trim any excess seam allowance on each side and between the legs. Fold the seam allowance at the leg openings and stitch before turning them out.

Turn the trousers right side out, iron the bottom edges and attach them to the body. They should be rigid and not secured. Do not fold the edges at the top of the trousers. Now put his jacket on the tilde Santa (Father Frost).

Hat

Due to the fact that the seams on the finished hat will be visible and there will be nothing to hide them, like at the hole around the neck, the edges of the hat should be processed very carefully, and this is quite difficult.

So, cut a 3 cm (1.1/4 inch) strip from the back edge of the hat and use a sewing machine to stitch it to the front of the hat.

Leave a seam allowance on each side to prevent the edges from moving out of the way when sewing the hat pieces together.

Sew the two parts of the hat together, folding the edges inward so as not to sew them into the seam on each side.

Trim the excess fabric from the seams on the wrong side and turn the hat outside using a wooden stick or something similar. The remaining edges should be sewn around the hat by hand.


Then fold the edges around the hat and sew it to the figure.

Beard

Fold a piece of fabric in half front side inside of such a size that the beard pattern fits twice on it. Place a piece of batting underneath.

Cut out the beard and make cuts in the seam allowances where it curves.

Cut a hole through one layer of fabric and turn the beard completely outward using a wooden stick. Press your beard.

Stitch along the beard, following the dotted line on the pattern.

Using pins again, attach the beard to the product and sew on the hat.

Boots

At the very end, you can draw boots (See section “”).
Cut two strips of fabric around the edge of the boot, approximately 3cm wide. Press the edges of each strip to the feet of the Santa Claus tilde and wrap it around it to hide the dyed edge.

Final Touches

At the final stage of the master class, sew buttons to the jacket.

Sew a small tilde Christmas tree without a trunk (See Master Class ""). Pin the Christmas tree to the hands of Santa Claus with pins, and then attach it with threads or using a glue gun.

Attach a small loop or metal ring to the back of the figurine's neck so it can be hung.

If your arms and legs will stick out to the sides due to the thickness of the garment, you can add small seams between the sleeve and jacket and between the two legs to hold them together.

This completes the master class and your tilda Santa Claus will delight you and your loved ones.

The New Year is just around the corner and, of course, you need to have time to sew your own Santa Claus, or Santa in the Western style. And of course, in the world of Tilda there cannot but be such a wonderful fairy-tale and kind character.

In fact, there are two options for the pattern of Santa with a deer (the fawn is Santa’s little companion who accompanies him everywhere). We will, of course, present you with both, but decide for yourself which one to choose. They are not fundamentally different. It’s just that according to one pattern the Santa will turn out to be plump, and the fawn will have a smooth back, and according to the second: a Santa of moderate build and a fawn of a different shape (lower and more square). On our website you can watch a master class on making a Santa with a deer using one of the patterns, but choose any one for yourself - and go ahead and create a wonderful toy!

Tilda Santa with a deer. Option one.

In principle, from the pattern you can immediately see that this is a Scops Owl with only long legs. Great option, why not!

Santa's version based on this pattern:

Tilda Santa with a deer. Second option.


And here we already meet a plump old man with shorter legs. And a fawn with a round back. The finished version looks like this.

Tilda Santa with a deer. Detailed master class from Tildamaster

Tilda Santa and Tilda Deer. Master class from Tildamaster

Hi all!

The New Year holidays are approaching at some rapid speed and you get the feeling that they will come quickly, and you won’t have time to prepare for them :) Every year I promise myself that I will start preparing for the New Year immediately after the end of the previous one, but things are still the same :) There are only three weeks left and you need to hurry up not only to prepare New Year's gifts, but also to decorate your home with a festive mood :)

Santa Clauses, Snow Maidens and other characters have always participated in New Year's decorations in the very different quality and made from the most different materials. I would like to invite you and me to sew a wonderful Santa made in the tilde style for the holidays, following a master class that the authors of the website tildamaster.ru kindly allowed me to publish on my blog. Well, so that Santa doesn’t get bored under the Christmas tree, you can also pair him with New Year's deer:) Enjoy watching!

It is impossible to imagine the New Year's holiday without a plump Father Frost (Santa Claus in the Western style) with a bag of gifts and a Snow Maiden. IN this master in class we will show you how to make a cute Santa with his little helper - a deer. This Santa will perfectly decorate the New Year's interior - under the Christmas tree or become original New Year's gift for your loved ones.

For work we will need:

Different types of fabrics for the body and suit (cotton or calico and fleece or fur), threads, needles, filler (holofiber), tools (scissors, a stick for turning and stuffing.

So let's get started!

First, print and cut out all the details of the pattern (they are given below).

Santa's arms and body will be made of flesh-colored fabric

But for the legs that will be in boots and “tights” (let’s call it that) we will need some type of fabric - dark brown and any colored one with stripes or dots. We sew these fabrics together as shown in the picture:

Now we fold the fabric in half with the right side inward and redraw the pattern of the legs in this way:

Sew, cut

It is better to use zig-zag or regular scissors, but then you need to make cuts in the places where the parts bend (so that the fabric does not stretch).

We turn out all the parts and start stuffing.

We stuff the arms and body tightly and completely

But we stuff the legs halfway, stitch the “knees” so that they bend and Santa can sit confidently, and then we stuff the other half just a little.

This is what they will look like in the end:

So, all the parts are stuffed and pinned together:

Sew on the arms and legs. Let's start with the feet. We carefully put them into the body, pin them for convenience and stitch them manually:

Now we sew the handles with a hidden seam. Make sure that all parts are sewn symmetrically.

Here he is, our Santa, fully assembled:

We begin to sew a suit from red fleece. This is a jacket, pants and a cap.

The pants are wide at the top and bottom.

First we sew along the outer sides, then we make a fur edging, and then we sew along the inner seam.

We sew the jacket as usual - shoulder seams, sew on the sleeves (first it’s better to baste by hand, then stitch), trim with fur and sew the jacket into a single whole.


We sew one strip of fur in the middle of the jacket. You can use fleece instead of fur.

We put on a jacket and pants. We fix it (you can sew it on, you can just pass it with a thread and tie it like a belt).

We wind white threads and sew them in the form of a beard. In total we sew two layers of thread.

We sew a cap and decorate it with fur.

We decorate the boots (we embroider a large cross with light threads and sew on a strip of fur)

We draw the eyes, sew the cap to the head, our Santa is ready:

Sewing a deer is not difficult.

The horns are made of dark fabric, everything else is made of flesh. Ears ( inner side) made of brightly colored fabric.

First we sew the ears to the head, then the head to the body, then the horns.

We decorate the deer - a bow on the neck, a bell, a pendant in the shape of a snowflake, any New Year's theme is welcome.

Here we have our couple of Christmas friends!

In fact, there are two options for the pattern of Santa with a deer (the fawn is Santa’s little companion who accompanies him everywhere). We will, of course, present you with both, but decide for yourself which one to choose. They are not fundamentally different. It’s just that according to one pattern the Santa will turn out to be plump, and the fawn will have a smooth back, and according to the second: a Santa of moderate build and a fawn of a different shape (lower and more square). On our website you can watch a master class on making a Santa with a deer using one of the patterns, but choose any one for yourself - and go ahead and create a wonderful toy!

Tilda Santa with a deer. Option one.

In principle, from the pattern you can immediately see that this is a Scops Owl with only long legs. Great option, why not!

Santa's version based on this pattern:


Tilda Santa with a deer. Second option. In fact, our master class is based on it

  • Body fabric
  • Fabric for clothing
  • beard yarn
  • sewing thread
  • stuffing for toys (synthetic fluff or holofiber)
  • eye paint, blush
  • tools: needles, scissors, sewing machine, chalk for transferring

Traditionally, Santa Claus is sewn in red and white, but you can change the image a little and sew a tilde Santa in your favorite colors.

Pattern

We transfer the pattern onto the pre-ironed fabric. We fold the fabric face inward and use chalk or a special marker to redraw the details. Then we sew it on a machine or by hand. After this, you can cut out the resulting details of Santa and deer, leaving 5-7 mm for an allowance.


Please note that Santa's legs consist of two types of fabric - striped and flesh. Therefore, before we cut out the legs, we need to sew these two fabrics in place and iron the seam between them. After this, we translate the leg pattern following the mark on the diagram. And again we stitch, cut, turn inside out.


You need to stuff the toy as tightly as possible. To do this, use either synthetic padding or padding polyester. You can help yourself with an ordinary sushi stick. Just make sure you don’t overdo it - you’ll accidentally break your Santa Claus!! A little tip - so that Santa’s arms and legs don’t stick out in different directions like a bodybuilder’s, you need to stuff them on top just a little bit.


When the body, arms and legs are stuffed, you can assemble the tilde: sew on the arms and legs.


Now we’ll make clothes for our Santa tilde. We cut out the necessary details of the jacket, pants and cap.


For the jacket, first we sew the shoulder seams, then we sew the sleeves and only now the side seams.


For pants, we sew first the middle seam, and then the step seam. We are sewing an elegant cap for the Santa Claus tilde, also known as the Santa Claus tilde. Don't forget to decorate your clothes with white trim and embroidery. We attach the pants and cap to the doll.


Well, what is Santa Claus without a lush beard?! We make the beard from knitting threads that match the color and texture. The easiest way is to wind threads on cardboard, cut along the edges and you're done! We outline the eyes of the tilde Santa Claus using pins. You can draw eyes using acrylic paint black, and draw the cheeks using regular blush or shadow. Sew the beard with a hidden seam.




Tilda Santa is ready, all that remains is to sew him a friend and partner - a little reindeer.

It is impossible to imagine the New Year's holiday without Santa Claus with a bag of gifts. And today in the “DIY” section the owner of the wonderful textile workshop “Tilda’stile” Polina shared with us the process of creating Santa using patterns from Norwegian artist-designer Toni Finnanger. This Santa will perfectly decorate the New Year's interior or become an original New Year's gift for your loved ones.

To create this wonderful interior doll (and it turns out, it should be noted, quite large - Santa’s height from the end of the cap to the heels is 87 cm) you will need:
1.Fabric (it is best to use cotton fabric without elastane) flesh-colored, as well as colored for clothing.
2. Scissors.
3. Thread and needle (sewing machine).
4. Sintepon for stuffing.
5. Sushi stick (with its help it is good to turn out narrow and long parts, as well as fill finished parts with padding polyester).
6. Marker or black fabric paint (draw eyes).
7. A simple pencil or pen (circle the patterns).
8. Pins.
9. Wool or mixed threads white for the beard (you can use a piece of white fur).
10. Decor (braid or artificial fur, buttons).

Each pattern sheet must be printed on an A4 sheet twice. This is due to the fact that the pattern pieces are overlapped, one on top of the other.

After everyone has done the patterns, cut them out and glued them together (you will have to glue Santa's pants and jacket together), you should end up with a set like this:

On flesh-colored fabric, folded in half, with the right side inward, we trace along the contours of the pattern body And pens Santa, as well as a bunny head and candy. We pin all the details together with pins.

Using a sewing machine, we sew along the drawn lines of all the parts. Regular straight stitch, stitch width 2mm.
For those who will sew by hand, it is better to use a “back needle” seam - this way the parts will be joined more neatly.
Important! At each beginning and end of the line, fasten the thread well. After all, this place of each part will be subject to significant impacts when turning the parts right side out and also when stuffing with padding polyester.

In order to cut out head Santa, fold the flesh-colored fabric in half again with the right side inward and transfer the pattern piece onto the fabric, leave allowances around the edges of about 5 mm, cut it out.

We do the same with the cap. Only instead of flesh-colored fabric we use colored fabric.

Separately, we sew each part of the head along the marking line with a part of the cap, folding the parts right side to front side.

Place the resulting parts (head + cap) together right side to right side, secure with pins and sew along the marking line.

From colored fabric, folded in half, we cut out the front and back jackets (you get two parts). We sew them together along the sides and along the shoulders.

We cut the sleeves from the same fabric. I decided to make sleeves with fur cuffs, so I immediately sewed the fabric and fur together.
You can make the sleeves entirely from fabric, and decorate them with fur or braid afterwards.
Fold each sleeve face inward and sew.

Sew the sleeves into the armholes of the jacket.
Since the parts are small it is easier to do this by hand.

Cut out and sew two boots from a plain colored fabric.

Bag for gifts - the simplest element: first fold the top edge and stitch it. Then make two lines: along the long side of the bag and along the bottom. The second long side represents the fold of the fabric.

Trousers . Place the pattern with the long side along the fold of the fabric. Cut out two identical parts.
First, sew seams along the trouser legs of each piece. Then perform a common step seam.

This is what happened in the end.
Turn all parts right side out and iron well.

Stuff the bunny's head, candy, boots, hands and Santa's head with a cap tightly with padding polyester.
Before stuffing, fluff the padding polyester thoroughly with your fingers. Fill in small portions, using a sushi stick to push and distribute the filling inside.

In order to prevent the padding polyester from moving inside the parts, sew up the bunny's and Santa's necks, arms and lower torso.
To “separate” the bunny’s ears by placing a line between them.

Place Santa's neck through a narrow hole on the body and sew it on.
Sew the arms to the body.

Loosely stuff the trouser legs with padding polyester. Gather the ends of the legs and sew them up.

Place the gathered ends of the legs into the boots and sew.

Put the trousers on the lower part of the body, secure with pins.
Important! Check if Santa can easily get into a sitting position. To do this, do not pull your trousers too high. Also, too much padding polyester in the legs can interfere with this.
When all the problems have been eliminated, we turn up the top edge of the pants, gather them slightly and sew them to the body.

Decorate the cuffs of the boots with a strip of fur (braid, you can make the cuffs from fabric of the same color as the boots themselves).
Sew decor onto pants and boots.
Thread on boots contrasting color make lacing.

Sew buttons onto the jacket.

Decorate the joint between the cap and Santa's head with fur or ribbon.
Draw eyes with a black marker on fabric (fabric paint), sew on a beard from threads, and make blush.
You can rouge your cheeks with regular blush using a cotton swab. Any dry blush will be suitable for these purposes (you cannot use lipstick or cream-based blush - these products will leave greasy stains on the fabric).
If you don’t have blush on hand, you can sharpen a red pencil (regular, for drawing) with a razor, use two teaspoons to grind the resulting shavings into powder and carefully cotton swab, rouge your cheeks.

Draw eyes for the bunny, rouge his cheeks and embroider his nose with pink threads.
Wrap the candy in a spiral with ribbon suitable color. Usually these candies are white and red, but since my Santa is all pink, the candy will be pale.
Fill the gift bag with padding polyester (after fluffing it well) approximately 2/3 full.

Place the hare and the candy in the bag, try it on, pin it on and secure with a few stitches.
Lightly tighten the neck of the bag with tape (thread, twine, etc.). Decorate to your taste with pine cones, bells, spruce twig and so on.