# Sewn Butterfly My daughter is in Kindergarten. She brought home an assignment around two weeks ago: "Make a butterfly with your family. The butterfly should include factual things about butterflies (e.g. 6 legs, antenae, etc). You should work together to create it. Bring it to class in two weeks and show us what you have made. Use any materials: paper, pipe cleaners, the sky is the limit." A while back we got my daughter a book, "Sewing School." It is full of projects and lessons from first principles on how to sew, mostly by hand (some of the later chapters do a bit of an intro on using a sewing machine). She has already made a small pillow (~10" diameter, round), a pin cushion that looks like an apply, and a small stuffed animal. So, we thought it might be fun to make a homemade stuffed animal butterfly. We had all of the supplies already, and did not need to go to the store for anything. My wife created the pattern, with my daughter, on paper. They cut out the wings together, and my daughter whip stitched the first wing about 2/3 of the way around. I finished it up. She stuffed it. I ended up doing almost the whole second wing (her focus drifted and then she got sick and just didn't feel well, but it was due soon). We did the body together today, mostly with me sewing and her cutting and stuffing. I sewed the wings on using a backstitch so that they would be pretty solidly attached. She picked out notions (ribbons and such) to use for the legs and I attached them using regular thread (we had been using a special kind of embroidery floss that doesn't split that the book had recommended for children for the rest of the butterfly). She added "gem stickers" for eyes, and we used some pink felt for the antenae. Oh! The wings are on some fabric my daughter picked out awhile ago: outer space. Nebulae, stars, etc. Really pretty. The body is from an old sheet we stopped using and cut up for fabric. It is a green sort of color. I think it came out really well! If it was a project I was doing on my own I would have done the seams on the inside and would not have used a whip stitch, but that--and the running stitch--was the stitch she was most comfortable with, and she liked having the color of the stitches on the outside. I don't know how long it will hold up, but I am pretty sure none of the other kids will have hand sewn a stuffed butterfly (I am certain they will have also done super cool stuff that fit what they do with their family). I like that she, my daughter, is learning skills like this at her age. I sure wasn't. Her focus is that of a 5/6 year old, so she did not do the whole thing... but she made very meaningful contributions to the design and construction. I am really proud of her, and of what the three of us made for this project.