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Weavy™ — Trade Screen Time for a Felt Bag Your Kid Sews Themselves
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Weavy™ — Trade Screen Time for a Felt Bag Your Kid Sews Themselves

Weavy™ — Trade Screen Time for a Felt Bag Your Kid Sews Themselves

Trade Tablet Time for a Bag She Actually Made Herself

weavy™ is a sew-it-yourself felt bag kit built for kids 4 and up. The holes are already punched. The needle is plastic — blunt tip, big eye, no "watch your fingers" warning. By the end of one quiet afternoon, your kid is walking around with a bag they stitched from scratch, and you didn't thread a single stitch for them.

Stop Watching Craft Kits End Up Half-Finished in the Closet

The instructions assume reading. The pieces don't line up. The needle pricks a finger by minute ten and the whole thing gets shoved under the bed. weavy™ skips the "Mom, can you help me?" loop entirely — the holes are already there, the needle is plastic, and the felt pieces only fit together the one way they're supposed to.

➤ Pre-Punched Holes Do the Hard Part: Stitches land exactly where they should because the felt arrives already perforated. No measuring, no guesswork, no crooked seams that make a kid give up at the third stitch.

➤ Plastic Needle, Not a Real One: Big enough for small fingers to grip, blunt enough to be safe on skin. They sew the whole bag without an adult hovering — and without anyone getting jabbed.

➤ A Whole Lineup of Designs to Pick From: Sun, butterfly, daisies, lollipop, fish, dollhouse, hearts, a kitty. She picks the one that's "hers" — and she'll carry it to school the next day.

How a 5-Year-Old Builds a Bag Without Help

Pre-punched holes mean the path of the stitch is already mapped out — the needle finds the next hole on its own. The plastic needle has a wide eye, so when the yarn slips loose (it will), a kid can re-thread it without crying for an adult.

She picks a design, threads the needle, and follows the holes around the edge. Press on the felt stickers — flowers, butterflies, eyes, hearts, whatever's in the bag — and the project is done. One afternoon, start to finish, and she walked through the kitchen holding it like a trophy.

"I bought it expecting to sit there helping the whole time. I made dinner instead. She came into the kitchen carrying her own bag." — Lauren H.

Specifications That Matter

  • Materials: Soft polyester felt panels, colored yarn, blunt plastic safety needle
  • Bag Sizes: From 9 × 19 cm up to 14 × 23.5 cm depending on the design — small enough for little shoulders, big enough to actually carry snacks and small toys
  • Safety: Plastic needle with rounded tip, no metal point, pre-punched holes, no small loose parts
  • What's in the Box: Pre-cut felt panels, woven handle, decorative felt stickers, colored yarn, plastic needle, illustrated step-by-step instructions

Stuff Parents Actually Ask Before Buying

What age is this actually for?

Designed for kids 4 to 10. A 4-year-old usually likes an adult nearby for the first few stitches. A 6-year-old can do the whole bag start to finish on their own.

Is the needle really safe?

The needle is plastic with a blunt rounded tip — meant for threading through pre-punched holes, not for piercing skin. Most parents are comfortable leaving the room.

How long does one bag take?

Around 45 to 90 minutes for a focused kid. Longer if they want to take their time and place every single sticker. One quiet afternoon, give or take.

Will she actually finish it, or will it end up in the half-done-craft pile?

That's the whole reason this kit exists. The pre-punched holes and one-way-only piece fit removes the "I don't know what to do next" moment that kills most kids' projects.

Is the finished bag sturdy enough to actually use?

Yes. The felt is thick enough to hold its shape, the yarn stitches lock the panels together, and the handle is sewn in the same way. Kids carry small toys, hair clips, snacks, and "secret stuff" in them.

$19.99
Weavy™ — Trade Screen Time for a Felt Bag Your Kid Sews Themselves
$19.99

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Weavy™ — Trade Screen Time for a Felt Bag Your Kid Sews Themselves

Trade Tablet Time for a Bag She Actually Made Herself

weavy™ is a sew-it-yourself felt bag kit built for kids 4 and up. The holes are already punched. The needle is plastic — blunt tip, big eye, no "watch your fingers" warning. By the end of one quiet afternoon, your kid is walking around with a bag they stitched from scratch, and you didn't thread a single stitch for them.

Stop Watching Craft Kits End Up Half-Finished in the Closet

The instructions assume reading. The pieces don't line up. The needle pricks a finger by minute ten and the whole thing gets shoved under the bed. weavy™ skips the "Mom, can you help me?" loop entirely — the holes are already there, the needle is plastic, and the felt pieces only fit together the one way they're supposed to.

➤ Pre-Punched Holes Do the Hard Part: Stitches land exactly where they should because the felt arrives already perforated. No measuring, no guesswork, no crooked seams that make a kid give up at the third stitch.

➤ Plastic Needle, Not a Real One: Big enough for small fingers to grip, blunt enough to be safe on skin. They sew the whole bag without an adult hovering — and without anyone getting jabbed.

➤ A Whole Lineup of Designs to Pick From: Sun, butterfly, daisies, lollipop, fish, dollhouse, hearts, a kitty. She picks the one that's "hers" — and she'll carry it to school the next day.

How a 5-Year-Old Builds a Bag Without Help

Pre-punched holes mean the path of the stitch is already mapped out — the needle finds the next hole on its own. The plastic needle has a wide eye, so when the yarn slips loose (it will), a kid can re-thread it without crying for an adult.

She picks a design, threads the needle, and follows the holes around the edge. Press on the felt stickers — flowers, butterflies, eyes, hearts, whatever's in the bag — and the project is done. One afternoon, start to finish, and she walked through the kitchen holding it like a trophy.

"I bought it expecting to sit there helping the whole time. I made dinner instead. She came into the kitchen carrying her own bag." — Lauren H.

Specifications That Matter

  • Materials: Soft polyester felt panels, colored yarn, blunt plastic safety needle
  • Bag Sizes: From 9 × 19 cm up to 14 × 23.5 cm depending on the design — small enough for little shoulders, big enough to actually carry snacks and small toys
  • Safety: Plastic needle with rounded tip, no metal point, pre-punched holes, no small loose parts
  • What's in the Box: Pre-cut felt panels, woven handle, decorative felt stickers, colored yarn, plastic needle, illustrated step-by-step instructions

Stuff Parents Actually Ask Before Buying

What age is this actually for?

Designed for kids 4 to 10. A 4-year-old usually likes an adult nearby for the first few stitches. A 6-year-old can do the whole bag start to finish on their own.

Is the needle really safe?

The needle is plastic with a blunt rounded tip — meant for threading through pre-punched holes, not for piercing skin. Most parents are comfortable leaving the room.

How long does one bag take?

Around 45 to 90 minutes for a focused kid. Longer if they want to take their time and place every single sticker. One quiet afternoon, give or take.

Will she actually finish it, or will it end up in the half-done-craft pile?

That's the whole reason this kit exists. The pre-punched holes and one-way-only piece fit removes the "I don't know what to do next" moment that kills most kids' projects.

Is the finished bag sturdy enough to actually use?

Yes. The felt is thick enough to hold its shape, the yarn stitches lock the panels together, and the handle is sewn in the same way. Kids carry small toys, hair clips, snacks, and "secret stuff" in them.

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Trade Tablet Time for a Bag She Actually Made Herself

weavy™ is a sew-it-yourself felt bag kit built for kids 4 and up. The holes are already punched. The needle is plastic — blunt tip, big eye, no "watch your fingers" warning. By the end of one quiet afternoon, your kid is walking around with a bag they stitched from scratch, and you didn't thread a single stitch for them.

Stop Watching Craft Kits End Up Half-Finished in the Closet

The instructions assume reading. The pieces don't line up. The needle pricks a finger by minute ten and the whole thing gets shoved under the bed. weavy™ skips the "Mom, can you help me?" loop entirely — the holes are already there, the needle is plastic, and the felt pieces only fit together the one way they're supposed to.

➤ Pre-Punched Holes Do the Hard Part: Stitches land exactly where they should because the felt arrives already perforated. No measuring, no guesswork, no crooked seams that make a kid give up at the third stitch.

➤ Plastic Needle, Not a Real One: Big enough for small fingers to grip, blunt enough to be safe on skin. They sew the whole bag without an adult hovering — and without anyone getting jabbed.

➤ A Whole Lineup of Designs to Pick From: Sun, butterfly, daisies, lollipop, fish, dollhouse, hearts, a kitty. She picks the one that's "hers" — and she'll carry it to school the next day.

How a 5-Year-Old Builds a Bag Without Help

Pre-punched holes mean the path of the stitch is already mapped out — the needle finds the next hole on its own. The plastic needle has a wide eye, so when the yarn slips loose (it will), a kid can re-thread it without crying for an adult.

She picks a design, threads the needle, and follows the holes around the edge. Press on the felt stickers — flowers, butterflies, eyes, hearts, whatever's in the bag — and the project is done. One afternoon, start to finish, and she walked through the kitchen holding it like a trophy.

"I bought it expecting to sit there helping the whole time. I made dinner instead. She came into the kitchen carrying her own bag." — Lauren H.

Specifications That Matter

  • Materials: Soft polyester felt panels, colored yarn, blunt plastic safety needle
  • Bag Sizes: From 9 × 19 cm up to 14 × 23.5 cm depending on the design — small enough for little shoulders, big enough to actually carry snacks and small toys
  • Safety: Plastic needle with rounded tip, no metal point, pre-punched holes, no small loose parts
  • What's in the Box: Pre-cut felt panels, woven handle, decorative felt stickers, colored yarn, plastic needle, illustrated step-by-step instructions

Stuff Parents Actually Ask Before Buying

What age is this actually for?

Designed for kids 4 to 10. A 4-year-old usually likes an adult nearby for the first few stitches. A 6-year-old can do the whole bag start to finish on their own.

Is the needle really safe?

The needle is plastic with a blunt rounded tip — meant for threading through pre-punched holes, not for piercing skin. Most parents are comfortable leaving the room.

How long does one bag take?

Around 45 to 90 minutes for a focused kid. Longer if they want to take their time and place every single sticker. One quiet afternoon, give or take.

Will she actually finish it, or will it end up in the half-done-craft pile?

That's the whole reason this kit exists. The pre-punched holes and one-way-only piece fit removes the "I don't know what to do next" moment that kills most kids' projects.

Is the finished bag sturdy enough to actually use?

Yes. The felt is thick enough to hold its shape, the yarn stitches lock the panels together, and the handle is sewn in the same way. Kids carry small toys, hair clips, snacks, and "secret stuff" in them.