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- Haus Page commented on Haus Page's instructable How-To-Sew Cute Plushie Animals
- Haus Page commented on Haus Page's instructable How to Compost Old Cotton T-Shirts
Hi, I haven't had problems, but we use natural dyes and denim (indigo) which is good for the environment. Sunlight generally breaks down all types of dye within a few months naturally so you can put them in your compost pile if you are concerned.
View Instructable »Cool, I will have to do that in my veggie garden.
- Haus Page followed pluvialychnus and Mark Montano
- Haus Page commented on pluvialychnus's instructable Wood ShoeView Instructable »
Good job. Enjoyed reading this.
- Haus Page favorited Wood Shoe by pluvialychnus
- Haus Page entered How to Compost Old Cotton T-Shirts in the Live off the Land Contest contest
- Haus Page entered How to Compost Old Cotton T-Shirts in the Backyard Contest 2016 contest
- Haus Page commented on Haus Page's instructable How to Compost Old Cotton T-ShirtsView Instructable »
Hey TomV4, I believe it depends on the fabric. Some natural fabrics take longer than others. Cotton is normally within a few months to a year around here in the South. Silk and wool also work pretty well. I got the idea from a larger factory I worked for. They used their leftover scraps from the fabric they cut to grow a vegtable garden out back for employees. It helped a lot with the hard clay soil we have around where we live. Works on a smaller scale too for home growers.
- Haus Page commented on Haus Page's instructable Japanese Quilt Geisha BagsView Instructable »
bias and ribbons as neither fray
- Haus Page commented on Haus Page's instructable Japanese Quilt Geisha Bags
Yes, it's a great project for scrap fabric which makes it ideal for left-overs from larger work, classrooms, or sewing parties. I really enjoy fabric Japanese fabric manipulation, but find myself too impatient to sew an entire quilt of squares. Since you only have to do one square to look good...it's pretty satisfying because you don't have to spend months sewing to get something unique and cool at the end.
View Instructable »Yup, a friend gave them to me...they're really handy if you have a sewing class to teach as they keep the small spare parts like pins, needles, buttons, ribbon, and beads all seperate.
- Haus Page followed sewing, props-and-accessories, jewelry and fashion channel
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You can use just about any fabric to make them, it's awesome! I've made them out of denim, fleece, plain cotton, flannel, and even old t-shirts. You can use just about anything you have, or can find at a fabric store. Best of luck!