
This purse is so cool, it's hard to imagine it once looked like this:

The shower curtain is available at Linens 'n Things for $14.99, and directions for making your own purse follow.
What you'll need• One plastic patterned shower curtain
• One yard each of lining fabric and interfacing (available at craft and fabric stores)
• A marker
• A pair of scissors
• One yard of ribbon
• A roll of duct tape
• Needle and thread or sewing machine
Steps
1. Using the marker, draw two 8-1/2-by-11-inch rectangles on
the shower curtain. "The beauty of the shower curtain is that you can
use a permanent marker and it doesn't matter," Ruff says. "It's going
to be covered up once you sew, and it won't bleed through because it's
plastic." Then snip out what you've traced. Next, cut one-inch squares
from the bottom corners of each rectangle. (Note: Position the
rectangles so their longer sides are at top and bottom for a tote
that's shaped like Ruff's.)
2. Layer the curtain rectangles on top of one another (Spidey
pattern facing inside). Starting on the right, sew a 1/2-inch seam
along the sides and bottom of the rectangle, leaving the top and the
one-inch squares open. Thread color and type is up to you, Ruff says:
"Whatever you find in the dollar bin will work just fine!" For stitch
length, she says, set your sewing machine to its average (which will
vary from one machine to the next). If you're sewing by hand, go for a
1/8- to 1/4-inch-long stitch. Anything much longer than that won't hold
the bag together, while too-short stitches risk shredding the curtain.
3. Make the corners of the bag. Pinch together the opposite
corners of each square, bringing together the bottom and side seams at
the center to create a flat seam, and sew together. Repeat with the
other bottom corner. Finish by reinforcing the seams with duct tape. "I
reinforced all of my seams with duct tape after I sewed them. If you do
it before then, you're going to gum up your sewing machine," Ruff says.
4. Repeat steps one through three separately with the lining
fabric and interfacing. Insert the lining into the interfacing. Sew the
two pieces together around the opening at the top. Turn the piece
inside out so that the lining is on the outside.
5. Add ribbon handles. (Ruff recommends a ribbon that is
3/4-inch wide or wider, for sturdiness.) Decide how long you'd like
your handles to be, then cut two pieces of ribbon two inches longer
than that length. Drape each ribbon, one for the front and one for the
back, inside the shower curtain, leaving an extra inch of each end
sticking outside the bag. Position the ribbon ends where you want the
handles to be and pin. Place the liner inside the bag with the lining
fabric facing the right side of the shower curtain. Sew the shower
curtain and lining pieces together with the ribbon, leaving a three- to
four-inch opening at the center of one side of the bag.
6. Pull the shower curtain through the opening, then push the
lining back into the bag and topstitch a decorative border around the
top. "The stitch can be straight or something fancy," Ruff says. Let
your personality, style, and experience level be your guide.
[$14.99, Linens 'N Things]
[via Book of Joe and Washington Post]
Related: Do-It-Yourself: The Bag You Couldn't Afford