Here's a quick recap of how I finish my tea towels.
I leave fairly long ends when I change yarn colours while I’m weaving on the loom and I don’t clip them off until after I’ve washed the tea towel. So clipping is my first order of business.
As I iron the tea towel for the first time I use a big quilter’s ruler to make sure that I’m pressing the tea towel square. As I iron up the tea towel I keep lining the ruler as I go along and I push or pull the tea towel to keep it straight, and then press it to set the shape.
There is always a frayed fringe that needs trimming. I’ve found the closer you trim to your stay stitch the flatter your hems will lay. Another lesson learned is to never, never, never stay stitch with navy thread on a white tea towel because you can see it through the hem! Although I try and use up all my partly finished sewing thread bobbins, I also try to keep the colours the same.
Make sure that the planned selvedge ends for the hem are the same length. It’s definitely easier to trim off any difference in length at this stage and it ensures the hems are the same size when you turn them under.
This is the best way I've found to get a nice even turn under hem. I use a stainless steel ruler and line it up on the tea towel, then using a hot iron I just press the hem over the ruler. The ruler will be HOT so watch your fingers when you pull it out.
Now that you have a nice pressed line, you can just turn under the hem to touch on the line and put in your pins…..easy peasy and pretty too!
8 comments:
Lovely!!
Best wishes from Monika
Your towels have almost a Colonial look to them! Really neat effect...
Thanks for the run through on your hemming technique. Its always good to see what others do so you can tweak and fine tune your own methods.
I'm going to look up one of those quilters rulers here!
Susan
Beautiful towels!!!
Stars and bars a perfect name for great towels. Being from down under the stars remind me of stylized frangipani flowers.
I've not come across the term bridging before and wondered if you could explain (without too many bad words!).
Hi Dianne,
In this case the bridging that I'm talking about is when the 1/4 inch long tails of one knot sticks like glue to the tails from another knot where I tied onto the old warp ~ multiply that by a couple of hundred and I swear I couldn't get the threads on the back of the loom to open at all! It was awful! I've had the same thing happen when I've been using fuzzies like mohair or slub silk; one thread will almost velcro itself or bridge to the other and they will begin to move together and cause skips in the web.
What a b.... Touch wood I've not had that problem until the knots are right near the heddles. Mind you I don't use mohair in a warp but will be trying unmercerised cotton soon. It will be interesting.
Beautiful towels and some great finishing tips. Thanks!
Thanks. I'm going to do this right away.
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