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Monday
Mar162009

Easy Drawstring Bag

We made this simple drawstring bag to hold colorful felt jelly bean bags, but it can be used for a wide range of things. A custom gift wrap alternative, a travel bag, a knitting project bag and the list goes on and on. It sews up in less than an hour and works with any kind of fabric. A perfect use for those fabric scraps you've been wondering what to do with.

If you'd like to make some of the cute felt "jelly beans" pictured above you can find the Bag of Beans Project Journal here.

Materials

Cut

Using your rotary cutter and non-slip rulers, cut a 13-inch wide by 26-inch long piece of fabric. For more help with this step, please see our Rotary Cutting tutorial.

Fold the piece in half the long way with right sides together to make a 13-inch square.

Sew

Starting at the fold, sew up the left and right side of the bag with a 1/4-inch seam allowance.  Stop 2-inches from the top on each side.

Drawstring channel

Working on only one half of the bag at a time, *fold and iron a 1/4-inch hem on the 2-inch portion of the fabric where you did not sew the seam (on the left and right sides).

Fold and iron a 1/4-inch hem along the top of the bag.

Fold it over another 3/4-inch as if to make a hem and iron (this will be the drawstring channel).

Sew along the bottom edge of the hem with a 1/6-inch seam allowance.

Repeat from * for the other half of the bag.

Make Gusset

Fold both corners of the bag so that the side seam of the bag is running exactly down the middle of the corner point. (Note: You will be sewing your gusset seam exactly perpendicular to the side seam.) You will want both gussets seams to be sewn at the exact same angle so that the gusset isn't askew.

Line up one side of your non-slip ruler with the drawstring channel edge. Using your water soluble marker, draw a line approximately 2-inches down from the point of the corner.  Repeat on other corner making sure your marks line up with the first corner.

Sew along the marker lines. Cut off the fabric corners below the seam to reduce bulk. Turn the bag right side out.

Thread ribbon through channel

Attach a large safety pin to the end of one of your alphabet ribbons.

Thread it through the drawstring channel on one side of the bag and then back around the other side so that you have both ends of the ribbon on one side.  Repeat with the other ribbon starting on the opposite side of the bag.  Leaving approximately 6-inches of the ribbon on either side, tie the ends in a knot and cut off excess.

The bag will cinch when you hold the knots on either side of the bag and pull outwards.

Enjoy!

--- Page

Reader Comments (11)

Great tutorial. My bag looks awesome and works great!
April 16, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterKate
Just wanted to offer a variation to this GREAT little bag. Instead of gusseted corners, keep the corners square and top stitch the bottom corners diagonally about 1.5" from the point and put eyelets in the corners. Then you can bring the drawstrings down to the eyelets, thread them through and knot them to make a great little backpack. I made two in this style for my niece and nephew - a great, super easy gift. Thanks for the tutorial Page!
April 29, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterJennifer B
just made three of these bags in about an hour and a half. nice tutorial and adorable bag. i also skipped the gussets and made french seams to keep the inside of the bag nice and neat and clean. they're lovely and i'll definitely make more.
June 10, 2009 | Unregistered Commenterjulie green
thank you so much for this great project!
I'm a beginner so it was a wonderful help to see the whole process step by step.
Greetings from Croatia!
August 14, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterMaja Marci
i couldn't agree with Maja more! i'm a beginner too and started teaching myself with cute bag/tote ideas. i made a few draw string bags to use at the grocery store for my produce items. making them out of muslin to keep the weight minimal so it doesn't affect the scales. i couldn't find any instructions that allowed me to easily sew a good channel for the draw string so i taught myself button holes - i call mine frankenstein button holes cuz that's what they look like. LOVE your instructions here and can't wait to create a new vegetable bag with this much easier process. i'm adding your site to my sewing RSS feeds. thanks!
August 17, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterDeNacho
Thank you for the wonderful tutorial! I just made one of these for my husband's role playing dice so he can transport them more easily for his games. It's perfect, turned out wonderfully and I haven't sewn with a machine in ages! Thank you again, I'll be posting on my own blog and telling the world how wonderful you are!

Rosemamie
www.in-a-galaxy.blogspot.com
March 5, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterRosemamie
Thank you so much for this excellent pattern! I too needed a bag for my RPG dice and this is perfect!
April 24, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterKimber
I have been looking and looking for a yellow upholstery and I love this! do you have more? or know where I can get some more? I need enough to make a couple large pillows. I would really appreciate it. thank you!
April 30, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterhillary collette
Thank you very much, this is a wonderful bag!
May 20, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterAnne
Hi! I was just wondering if you minded me using using these instructionals to add to my own website. I'm not a professional, but I thought this idea was amazing. If you do mind me using this EXACT instructional, then would it be okay with you for me to only use the main picture (not the instructional pictures), and completely revise your entire instructions for me to post on my own website. Please reply in the comments section. I will not use ANYTHING from your websites until you reply to this message. Thanks!

The Crafty Girl:)
June 10, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterThe Crafty Girl :)
Hi Crafty Girl,
You may not copy our instructions or photos on your website. If you would like to use one photo of the completed bag and provide a link for your readers to direct them to our website for the instructions that would be fine.
Please let us know if you have any questions.
thanks
June 10, 2010 | Registered Commenterpurl bee

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