It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 29. Huile d’Olive
Posted: 10/09/2010 Filed under: Design, Food, Travel | Tags: bags Leave a commentAuthor: Ngoc
Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!
Surrounded by home-made tapenade, artisan breads, fresh spices and beautiful flowers, they were reminded of Chris (from the Soak office) and decided to pick up this wonderful bag for her.
It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 27. Summer Fling.
Posted: 30/07/2010 Filed under: Craft, Design | Tags: amy butler, bags, echino, fabrics, frenchy, jacqueline save Leave a commentAuthor: Jacqueline
Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!
It’s an innocent fling. I’m not having an affair. I am loyal and trustworthy. It’s just a bag. I just needed a break. A break from the love and devotion towards the two giant quilts I’m currently working on. One is cut out and part way through assembly, the other, a sexy pile of fabric, staring longingly for attention, much like my cats at dinner time.
As you know from last week, I decided to work on a Frenchy bag, by Amy Butler. I’m working towards a specific (top secret) project so for now, it’s practice bags, for myself. I’ve diverged a bit from the pattern, made some discoveries and decisions in new directions, but generally am going with the original design.
First off, more pockets. My current purse is an endless pit. I rarely catch my phone before the last ring and I always have open pens floating in the bottom. Needless to say, open pens and fine Echino fabrics are not an ideal match.
I attached the newly created pockets on the ‘pocket panels’. Once in place, these pockets are really centre dividers, rather than ‘pockets’ as they are full width. While the pockets turned out to be the perfect size, their location left something to be desired. The bag is rather floppy, the pockets have no structure. The phone and pens are still hard to find. Next time, the secondary pockets will attach directly to the side panels for structure and stability. Lucky for me, I’m making more bags. Yes, I am aware the pattern calls for a variety of great interfacings. I used decor weight fabric and consciously made a soft and floppy summer bag.
I used several different prints for the interior pockets. If you’ve seen my quilt backs, you’ll know that I don’t believe in one side being more important than the other, so my lining has as much energy as the exterior.

I also extended the shoulder strap length. It is really important to dry run shoulder straps before making any bag. I am tall, so I typically need a few extra inches. It is also important to take seasonality into consideration. In the summer, I wear lighter, more form fitting clothes; the straps have more room to move. In the winter, over a sweater and coat, I need longer straps.
I finished my first bag the Saturday after I bought my fabrics and I have to say, I am in love. I’ve been using it all week. It’s lighter in colour than I usually make for bags (who tend to live on the floor). All the fabrics were prewashed with Soak, so the bag is safe for machine washing when it starts to show signs of love, dirt and probably pen stains. I’m going to keep working on a couple of more bags, experimenting with interfacings, surface detailing and adding some piecework to the patterns.
I’m sure my affair with Frenchy will be short lived. I’ll come back to her in the fall for some wintery bags. For now, it’s just summer fun. Fear not little quilts, I’ve got a full week’s holiday booked in August for quilting at the cottage and before you know it the days will be short and full of quilting again.
It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 19. Melt.
Posted: 04/06/2010 Filed under: Business, Design, Food, Travel, Uncategorized | Tags: bags, Jacqueline Sava, Melt, UK Leave a commentAuthor: Jacqueline
Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!
There has been great debate about whether this blog is about just Soak, or great products in general. Is it commercial, or personal? Is it promotional or creative exploration? Well, we’re not ready to commit either way, but we feel that anything that inspires us enough to share should be included.
Sometimes it is about Soak, sometimes our customers, sometimes, like today, brilliant design, merchandising and products in totally unrelated fields. Today, I bring you, Melt.

While in London (yes, there’ll be several posts about great British discoveries), we discovered, at Liberty of London in the ‘confectionery department’, Melt chocolates. More specifically, hot chocolate lollipops. A stick of perfectly square chocolate, wrapped in vividly coloured papers, filled with deliciousness. Single origin hot chocolate blocks, as they are called. Hand made in their own kitchen.
Directions: swirl the lollipop in steeped milk and enjoy. How decadent.

A few steps from Portobello Road in a posh neighbourhood in Notting Hill, we found a Melt retail store. There were bars of chocolate, truffles and other caramel treats in the most perfectly elegant space.
There was even a Melt bike for carrying chilled bundles of deliciousness around town.
As I was leaving with my perfectly lovely bag filled with hot chocolate lollipops, I couldn’t resist photographing the shop, to share it with you. From brand to bar, Melt is a true example of a leading company. Check them out; we hope you’ll be as inspired as we were. Oh, and yes, the hot chocolate was delicious!
It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 17: Mission accomplished. Well, the first half.
Posted: 21/05/2010 Filed under: Business, Craft, Design, Travel, Uncategorized | Tags: bags, Jacqueline Sava, travel 3 Comments| Author: Jacqueline Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday, to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!
I’ve travelled across the Atlantic to see the Quilt Exhibit at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, England. This morning, we started off at Quilts 1700-2010. What a way to start the day. The exhibition includes historical work created in the UK from eighteenth century patchwork through to modern times. My favorite piece was a quilt made entire of wool by a tailor, James Williams, of Wrexham, Wales, 1842-52. He, yes he, used left over pieces of wool from his tailor shop and spent over 18 years making innovative quilts. Following the exhibit I went to the shop to secure a stash of limited production, reproduction fabrics made especially for the show. Needless to say, my bag was full. I bought fat quarters galore, and don’t worry dear quilting friends, you know who you are, I bought fat quarters and treats for you too. We bought one copy of the show catalog, which I’ll surely bring to the next Quilt Sunday. Incidentally, I’ve also been photographing inspirational patterns as I come across them on my travels. A new sketchbook is surely in the works… but that’s another story.
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101 things to do with Soak | 011 Removing Paint from brushes
Posted: 20/04/2010 Filed under: Craft, Design, Uncategorized, Uses for Soak | Tags: 101, hand washing, paint brushes, soak wash, soakwash, wash Leave a commentAuthor: Ngoc
If you are anything like me, then you’re guilty of abandoning your paint covered brushes as soon as the first coat is done, to sit, relax and reward yourself with a drink. This results in many curses the next day when you go to paint your second coat, only to find the rollers and brushes completed caked in dry paint due to your laziness the day before. 10 minutes will then be spent trying to remove the dried paint before giving up and making a trip to the hardware store to pick up another set. To avoid this frustration and extra cost, I’ve vowed to take a page from Jacqueline’s book and become a diligent brush washer.
Jacqueline is in the midst of renovating her apartment one room at a time. She is no stranger to primer, paint, rollers and brushes. She’s taken photos to show us all how painless and easy it is to wash your brushes with Soak as soon as you are done using them.
Pour a little soak on the brush and swish it around your hand to remove most of the paint.
Don’t forget to wash between the bristles.
As good as new and ready to tackle on another day of painting.
Week 3 | Knitting
Posted: 01/04/2010 Filed under: Craft, Design, Knitting, Uncategorized | Tags: Jacqueline Sava, Knitting Leave a commentAuthor: Jacqueline
I’m through the first skein, two to go; one third done, well on my way. I’ve used almost all the needles I bought, consulted www.knittinghelp.com once and have caught on to the seed stitch pattern so I don’t have to keep such intense notes.

My favorite comments over the past few weeks have been about the inconsistency between the complexity of the pattern and my somewhat basic hand-knitting skills. While I myself am impressed with the way this wrap is developing, it is worth noting that I do have a strong background in knitting, machine knitting.
Many moons ago I took machine knitting while in college at Rhode Island School of Design. I was in love after the first class. After graduation my passion for knitting turned into Jacq’s-Hats, an award winning knit accessories company. We designed and sold our knits to retailers (much like Soak, only on a smaller scale). We developed a local network of machine knitters for production and sourced yarn internationally. We also participated in the One of a Kind Show in Toronto, a huge craft retail event (which incidentally, is on this weekend, if you are local).
The photos are a bit circa 1999, but then again, that’s when they were taken.
Our customers often ask us how they can best take care of our wool hats, sweaters and scarves. When we started, we recommended other wool washes, or baby shampoo. They worked okay, but had overpowering fragrances that were kind of dated. Our customers have a modern take on life, so we decided to offer them a modern approach to fiber care, too. We developed a better, no-rinse wash solution that works with our stuff – and with anything else people care about enough to hand wash. That’s essentially how Soak was born. The rest, as they say, is history.
This year, we’re bringing back our knits. I’m designing again. My first group of patterns goes with our latest Soak fragrance, Unleash, inspired by Ravelry. We’ve designed (based on our original knits of course!) a set, hat, mitts and scarf, with Louet Gems yarns in custom Ravelry inspired colors.
You can purchase the patterns here. You can purchase the yarns or kits (Soak, pattern and yarn) here.
Ask for them at your local yarn shop. We’re working on our distribution. If you are a local yarn shop, contact us to place your order. They’ll be appearing in magazines and shops for fall knitting and are already all the rage on Ravelry.com.
This is the colour range, with fun Ravelry inspired names.
The knitting needles are happy to have some consistent attention. (machine or otherwise). They’ve long been overshadowed by work, life and quilting. My arms are starting to get a regular workout… my shoulders too. My hands finally remember what to do on their own (thank goodness).
Next week, knitting posture and maybe some stretches too.
It’s Friday and I’m bagged. Week 1: A brief history.
Posted: 22/01/2010 Filed under: Craft, Design, Travel | Tags: bags, Jacqueline Sava Leave a commentAuthor: Jacqueline
Grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday to learn how these Soak worthy bags came to be. Are you bagged? Send us your favorite bag. If we feature it here, we’ll send you a Soak gift pack, in a pretty bag, of course!

She loved the prints, the colours, the sayings and, I’m certain, the shopping that went along with them. Many bags are from boutiques that no longer exist, or stores that have changed their name, logo and image, time and time again. Did you know that Banana Republic used to be a ‘Travel & Safari Clothing Company’? (I miss those old Banana Republic t-shirts with lions and tigers and bears, oh my!) Club Monaco is a great Canadian brand of the past. Roots is still around with its iconic beaver et al. Remember Ken Done with those great water colours and prints?

I guess that’s where my fascination for bags began. Where we live, in the city of Toronto, Canada, there’s a new bylaw that states that retailers must now charge a minimum of $.05 for a plastic bag. This trend towards re-usable bags has created a larger than life collection of brilliant bags at our office. We now travel the globe, attending trade shows, visiting customers and of course, shopping. While our bag collection is often used for carrying Soak to and from the office, some of our bags are becoming icons in their own ways.Each Friday we’re going to share part of our bag collection with you. You’ll learn about bags from our distributors, Soak retailers, events we’ve sponsored and places we’ve been. We’ll include fascinating facts, merchandising tips and whatever else we find in the bag. So sit down, grab a coffee or tea and join us each Friday to learn how these bags came to live at our office.
Happy Thanksgiving to our American friends and customers!
Posted: 25/11/2009 Filed under: Craft, Design, Soak Stockists Leave a comment
Mini-soak Merchandising at its finest. Sometimes, our crafty skills shine in unexpected ways.
Enjoy the holiday and don’t forget to include Soak in your holiday shopping and gift-giving plans.
Order online or see our list of retailers to find one near you.
a letter from Andrea, the summer intern…
Posted: 22/10/2009 Filed under: Design, Travel Leave a commentI realized that I should really post the thank-you (love) letter to Soak from our summer intern Andrea. This is particularly important as she returns to our office Monday to work during her reading week. She was a dream to have at the office, we enjoyed teaching her as much as she enjoyed learning. This is her, along with her first knit scarf! Below find the letter she left for us on her last day.
Being a summer intern, entails me only staying at Soak for the summer. I felt it was necessary to write you all a lovely send off message before I leave to go back to school so you will remember me (not like that will be hard, I am pretty awesome). Jacqueline, I will be using your printer to print out this letter, luckily, it isn’t a resignation letter, so I have one up on that other guy who used your printer to print something of this sort off.
Moving on….I tend to ramble on with these sorts of things. My friends always make fun of me for it. I wouldn’t be surprised if this ended up to be about a page long. Lucky for those of you who read it!
Working here this summer has been awesome. I’ve definitely learnt on a lot of stuff that I wouldn’t have in another workplace and I really appreciate being able have that opportunity. Also, I’m not complaining about how nice my hands smelt after doing some bottle washings.
Knowing that you have a great group of people behind you to help you out everyday is fantastic, and made me feel a whole lot less intimidated. I was able to break out of my shell and become a pretty different person. Lots of laughs, and stories contributed to this extra boost of confidence. I was able to get comfortable with everyone which makes coming into work everyday much easier. I’d like to thank each and every one of you for contributing to that.
Ailie: I wouldn’t want to share a stapler with anyone else. I wish both you and baby best wishes. Enjoy the big boy desk. It’s only brought me good times.
Chris: I’d still be a non-knitter if it wasn’t for you. Just thinking about that is unfortunate. I will be wearing that purple scarf everyday come wintertime. Thanks for helping me out with everything you did throughout this summer. You are hilarious. Just absolutely hilarious.
Jacqueline: 1. Thank you for my job. I am forever grateful. 2. Best boss ever yes? Yes. I’m most definitely not trying to kiss ass here. It’s most definitely true. Thank you for letting me into Soak to learn AND work at the same time. You are a fantastic person
Dafina: You’re super awesome, and great to work with! Have fun, and congrats again on being Canadian! 🙂
So I would like to leave you with one last thing. The box area is both yours and my friend. Be kind to it, it really did no harm to you.
Have fun and don’t miss me too much. I know it will be hard. -AL
DreamUp- Jacqueline’s session on Selling into Big Business
Posted: 20/10/2009 Filed under: Business, Design, Uncategorized Leave a commentYesterday I spoke at the Small Business Forum 2009, Dream Up, in Toronto. My session was entitled Selling to Big Business- Courting, seducing and building everlasting (and profitable) relationships). We had great fun talking business and networking. We gave out lots of mini-soaks too!
Among other interesting people, I had a chance to re-connect with W. Brett Wilson, from Dragons’ Den. He remembered Soak and the pitch (how fantastic!). We talked Soak, the Den, business etc. That’s another story though, post soon to follow.
Here is the link to the presentation. Please respect the fact that I created and own the content, images and reference to our Soak customers. Ask for permission if you want to use the content. I look forward to staying in touch with everyone I met yesterday. Congratulations to Enterprise Toronto for hosting such a spectacular event.





The second half of the journey you ask? Liberty of London, on Thursday. 











