Pokemania

So all my free time right now is pretty much consumed by Pokemon Go.  I’m mostly joking, but in all honesty, Will & I have been going out every night to hit up Pokestops.  Super silly.  We went out to main street in Clinton at 10:30pm on Friday and there were at least 20 other people doing the exact same thing.   After departing a conversation with one of the other groups, we heard one of them remark “I never thought anything like this would happen in our lifetimes!”  Again very silly.  But seriously, if you played red or blue as a child this game was literally made for you.   You know you always wanted to catch pokemon in the real world.  And now you can!

As an example of how great it is, Saturday we went to my parent’s summerhouse and went out in the paddleboat to catch water pokemon.  Totally worked, look at a couple I caught…

Pokemon on the Lake

Fishing for Pokemon on the Lake

A wild magikarp appeared!

A wild magikarp appeared!

A wild poliwag appeared!

A wild poliwag appeared!

Well given all the pokemania – I thought I would post something pokemon related.  I am fairly short on time (what with leveling up all my pokemon and becoming a pokemon master) so I decided to refashion a hat and add an embroidered pokeball to it.  I will never attempt to re-make a baseball cap again.  Everything was super easy except the brim.  I redid the brim about 45 times until I got something that even looked remotely okay.  The problem was in finishing the hat they had trimmed the excess material, making it impossible to stitch it back together properly.  Never again.

I’ll try to post the tutorial for re-doing a hat later this week in case anyone is adventurous, but for now here’s a free embroidery file of a pokeball for you to adorn everything with.  You’ll need to change the extension from .zip to .pes.  Though it is fully functional and looks great, it is really not a great example of elegant machine embroidery, so I’ll try to post a less teflon-tough version when pokemon mania subsides.

https://www.ladybeekeeper.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/pokemon.zip

Go Team Blue!

pokemon_hat

How to Refashion a Baseball Cap into a Pokemon Trainer Hat

What you need:

  • embroidery machine and the embroidery file here (rename from .zip to .pes)
  • red and white embroidery thread
  • old baseball cap (I used a hat Will got from a friend’s wedding since Will doesn’t wear hats – I still have mine Matt & Maren ;) )
  • thick white material (like canvas)
  • recycled pattern paper
  • white thread
  • seam ripper
  1. First you’ll need to disassemble the hat starting at the little button on top. I found that you could remove the two pieces of the button by using a screw driver.

    Pry off metal button

    Pry off metal button

  2. Begin removing the brim and front panel of the hat. This is all you’ll want to remove.  Make sure to keep the hat band intact when you remove the front panel and brim.  You’ll want to take pictures so you can remember how to put it all back together as it may be slightly different than my hat.
  3. Take the front piece and lay it flat, tracing a pattern for your new front panel.

    Remove the front panel of the hat

    Remove the front panel of the hat, trace for new pattern

  4. Trace your pattern on the white canvas, leaving room for 1/2″ of seam allowance all around.
  5. Using your embroidery machine and a 4×4″ hoop, stitch the pokeball in the center of your canvas panel, switching colors from red to white when prompted.

    Embroider pokeball on front panel

    Embroider pokeball on front panel

  6. Cut out your pattern leaving 1/2″ seam allowance all around. Cut a slit at the top of the hat like the original panel.

    Cut out front panel

    Cut out front panel

  7. Overlap the two edges of the slit and stitch closed, forming a three dimensional panel for your forehead.

    Pin dart at front of hat

    Pin dart at front of hat

  8. Pin each side of the panel to each side front of the hat, making sure to line up the point properly.

    Pin front panel

    Pin front panel

  9. Sew each side.

    Stitch front panel

    Stitch front panel

  10. Top stitch slightly to the inside of where you just stitched on the front panel sides.

    Top stitch

    Top stitch

  11. Reattach the brim by pinning the brim right sides together to the outside of the front panel of the hat. This was the biggest challenge for me because I could not fit the brim between the feed dogs and the presser foot.
  12. After I got it to sit as nice as possible, I made it look a bit better by top stitching along the edge of the brim and the front panel.
  13. Finally reattach the button. (I just tapped the two pieces together with a hammer.)

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7 Responses to Pokemania

  1. Will (Husband) says:

    It’s a healthy obsession! You have to walk everywhere to play it!

    I think the hat came out awesome!

  2. Mandar says:

    Those Pokemon pictures are so majestic! Truly profsssional quality. And I really like the hat! Who knew they are so complicated to fashion. Molly and I are having a game night tonight, mainly to play euchre but I’m hoping we can sneak some Birds are Amazing into the mix.

    • lexicolton says:

      HAHA Did you know peregrine falcons are very self conscious? That is why they perch so high up in trees (not because of their great eyesight).

  3. Mandar says:

    When I say professional quality, I mean Pokemon snap would be impressed!

    • lexicolton says:

      And thank you. I mean, I didn’t have any poke treats to throw at them to make them dance or anything, so I did the best I could with what I had.

      Also – I mentioned Pokemon Snap to my co-worker just yesterday! He has never played it. I am very tempted to dig up the N64 and let him borrow it. I wonder if Mark took it.

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