Needle Case

Needle Case

Designed by Julie A. Bolduc
Pattern ID: p114008
Date Added: February 6, 2001

This needle case can be completed in an evening. It has 2 pieces of plastic tucked inside to help keep its shape.


Pattern Links


Sheetworks Studio

Sheetworks Studio is your free crafting workspace for printing accurate templates, bead strips, quilt blocks, labels, and creative project sheets. Every page is sized for US Letter paper and engineered for clean cuts, perfect alignment, and smooth creative flow.

The new version of Sheetworks Studio has officially arrived! After a month of steady work, improvements, and new features, the app is cleaner, easier to use, and ready for you to explore.

Sheetworks Studio is a one‑time purchase of $100. That’s it — no subscriptions, no monthly fees, and no extra charges. All templates released for Sheetworks Studio are free to download and can be imported directly into the app.


Sheetworks Studio

All items in our online shop ship free within the US only. I currently offer U.S. shipping only and it is from rural Maine. Delivery can vary from 2–14 days depending on your distance from Maine. Expedited shipping is not available.

Please note: I am now selling all of my paper bead making tools and other items from this web site using Paypal payments.

I have removed all of my paper bead making tools from Amazon. My Kindle crochet pattern books and paper template paperback books continue to be available on Amazon, as they are printed and fulfilled directly by Amazon. A limited number of paper bead making tools remain available on Etsy but I am not linking to those tools from this site.

Random Quick Tip!

What Size Hook?
If you are the type to have many projects going at the same time and some of those projects require the same size hook, well what do you do to mark your spot and remember what hook size is needed? Well, Julie Morash gave me the idea of making a marker which would have the size hook on it and then you would stick it in your work. Well I went with this concept and came up with using a plastic tab from a loaf of bread and mark the size hook on it with a magic marker and put it at the last stitch. That way, when you go back to work on the project, you will know what size hook to use for it. Thanks Julie for the inspiration and the idea plant.