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« Sewing Patterns for home | Main | Handmade Dress Up Series Wrap Up: 26 tutorials »

October 20, 2011

Handmade Dress Up Series: DIY Karate Kid Headband (hachimaki) Tutorial

Welcome to the Handmade Dress Up Series! Like what you see? Please PIN it or Stumble it! Thanks!

Photobucket

Hello all!  I’m Christie from A Lemon Squeezy Home.  I’m excited to be here today as part of Andrea’s series.  What a wonderful idea to get a ton of fun dress-up items for the kiddos!  My kids love our dress-up box, and it looks like I might have to add to it after seeing everyone’s tutorials. DSC_1323 Today we’re going to keep it really simple.  DSC_1340 I’m going to show you how to make Daniel Larusso’s headband from The Karate Kid.  I think the correct term is a hachimaki.  Click to zoom
picture source
You can purchase these for about $10.00 (shipped) online, but I figured they would be so easy to make, and you probably even have everything you need in your house already! Let’s get started!DSC_1333 You’ll need: -printed flower design, download HERE (I used my silhouette software to trace the image HERE).  You can resize the flower to make it bigger or smaller according to how large or small a headband you are making.  This size is good for about 4-9 year olds.  Ish.  :) -black fabric or black acrylic paint -paint brush -8” x about 44” piece white fabric (I used cotton) -pencil with an eraser in nearly new condition (so the sides aren’t worn down) DSC_1201 Fold the white piece of fabric in half lengthwise and crease the middle so you know where it is.DSC_1203 Center the flower underneath the fabric and trace with a pencil (or something that might erase better—I had a hard time getting my pencil marks off where the paint didn’t cover it).  Or you can trace it onto freezer paper and cut out the shape. DSC_1205 Place a sheet of paper underneath and start painting.  You can either free-hand it and like I did, or you could cut this shape out of freezer paper, iron the freezer paper on, and paint.  That would be easier and probably faster, but I thought it would be faster the way I did it.   It probably wasn’t.  Next, start marking with a pencil (starting about 1/2” away from the flower) every 1”, then another line 1” away from that.  My dots aren’t as close together as the real version, so you can make your dots closer if you’d like. DSC_1207 Dip your eraser in the black paint and start making dots over the pencil markings in the above picture (make sure there is paper beneath your fabric again).  I did 8 columns of dots on either side of the flower.  DSC_1210DSC_1211 Once the paint has dried, fold the short ends under 1/4”, then another 1/4” and sew.  The ends are now finished.  Almost done!DSC_1213 Now all you do is fold in half so the long ends match, and sew about a 1/4” seam down the whole long edge.DSC_1215 Iron the seam flat as picture below.DSC_1216 Turn right side out and you are done!  DSC_1217 Since my 8 year old received the 1984 version of Karate Kid for his birthday, he’s been really into Karate.  DSC_1327 And was happy to oblige for many, many pictures. “Mom!  Take a picture of me doing this move!” DSC_1357DSC_1338DSC_1358 Thanks for having me today, Andrea! 
Thank YOU Christie! Thanks for showing us how to make a Karate Kid headband! 
Check out the other Handmade Dress Up tutorials!

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Handmade Dress Up Series: DIY Karate Kid Headband (hachimaki) Tutorial

Welcome to the Handmade Dress Up Series! Like what you see? Please PIN it or Stumble it! Thanks!

Photobucket

Hello all!  I’m Christie from A Lemon Squeezy Home.  I’m excited to be here today as part of Andrea’s series.  What a wonderful idea to get a ton of fun dress-up items for the kiddos!  My kids love our dress-up box, and it looks like I might have to add to it after seeing everyone’s tutorials. DSC_1323 Today we’re going to keep it really simple.  DSC_1340 I’m going to show you how to make Daniel Larusso’s headband from The Karate Kid.  I think the correct term is a hachimaki.  Click to zoom
picture source
You can purchase these for about $10.00 (shipped) online, but I figured they would be so easy to make, and you probably even have everything you need in your house already! Let’s get started!DSC_1333 You’ll need: -printed flower design, download HERE (I used my silhouette software to trace the image HERE).  You can resize the flower to make it bigger or smaller according to how large or small a headband you are making.  This size is good for about 4-9 year olds.  Ish.  :) -black fabric or black acrylic paint -paint brush -8” x about 44” piece white fabric (I used cotton) -pencil with an eraser in nearly new condition (so the sides aren’t worn down) DSC_1201 Fold the white piece of fabric in half lengthwise and crease the middle so you know where it is.DSC_1203 Center the flower underneath the fabric and trace with a pencil (or something that might erase better—I had a hard time getting my pencil marks off where the paint didn’t cover it).  Or you can trace it onto freezer paper and cut out the shape. DSC_1205 Place a sheet of paper underneath and start painting.  You can either free-hand it and like I did, or you could cut this shape out of freezer paper, iron the freezer paper on, and paint.  That would be easier and probably faster, but I thought it would be faster the way I did it.   It probably wasn’t.  Next, start marking with a pencil (starting about 1/2” away from the flower) every 1”, then another line 1” away from that.  My dots aren’t as close together as the real version, so you can make your dots closer if you’d like. DSC_1207 Dip your eraser in the black paint and start making dots over the pencil markings in the above picture (make sure there is paper beneath your fabric again).  I did 8 columns of dots on either side of the flower.  DSC_1210DSC_1211 Once the paint has dried, fold the short ends under 1/4”, then another 1/4” and sew.  The ends are now finished.  Almost done!DSC_1213 Now all you do is fold in half so the long ends match, and sew about a 1/4” seam down the whole long edge.DSC_1215 Iron the seam flat as picture below.DSC_1216 Turn right side out and you are done!  DSC_1217 Since my 8 year old received the 1984 version of Karate Kid for his birthday, he’s been really into Karate.  DSC_1327 And was happy to oblige for many, many pictures. “Mom!  Take a picture of me doing this move!” DSC_1357DSC_1338DSC_1358 Thanks for having me today, Andrea! 
Thank YOU Christie! Thanks for showing us how to make a Karate Kid headband! 
Check out the other Handmade Dress Up tutorials!

Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket PhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucket PhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucketPhotobucket

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