An Introduction to Rag Rugs: Creative Recycling
Making is good for you. Exploring crafts can be relaxing and therapeutic : the projects in this book are accessible to anyone who is inspired to recycle old clothes and textiles into unique, decorative, useful projects. Our forbears improvised tools to recycle their worn clothes - mostly dark suiting or mill waste if they lived near a mill. Usually they made mats for their cold floors or as draft excluders across doors. Nowadays you can choose from so many more colors and textures - painting with rags! Try one project or more. You will be able to use the techniques to design and make your own one-off items for your home or as hand-made gifts. The techniques here are traditional and simple - you will be surprised at how drab fabrics become transformed. Simple designs work best and you can even improvise as you work. If a fabric runs out, then use another - I call that organic design! Hooking is the best technique for pictorial detail and different techniques could be combined for original wall art. Historically, rugs were made by several people sitting round a horizontal frame with the children cutting the pieces of rag which were prodded into the hessian (burlap) backing to make a shaggy mat. There is a prodded project (for purists) but you can also achieve the same effect without a frame by progging, which can be done on table or thigh (carefully). Warning – this craft can be addictive!
1138891762
An Introduction to Rag Rugs: Creative Recycling
Making is good for you. Exploring crafts can be relaxing and therapeutic : the projects in this book are accessible to anyone who is inspired to recycle old clothes and textiles into unique, decorative, useful projects. Our forbears improvised tools to recycle their worn clothes - mostly dark suiting or mill waste if they lived near a mill. Usually they made mats for their cold floors or as draft excluders across doors. Nowadays you can choose from so many more colors and textures - painting with rags! Try one project or more. You will be able to use the techniques to design and make your own one-off items for your home or as hand-made gifts. The techniques here are traditional and simple - you will be surprised at how drab fabrics become transformed. Simple designs work best and you can even improvise as you work. If a fabric runs out, then use another - I call that organic design! Hooking is the best technique for pictorial detail and different techniques could be combined for original wall art. Historically, rugs were made by several people sitting round a horizontal frame with the children cutting the pieces of rag which were prodded into the hessian (burlap) backing to make a shaggy mat. There is a prodded project (for purists) but you can also achieve the same effect without a frame by progging, which can be done on table or thigh (carefully). Warning – this craft can be addictive!
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An Introduction to Rag Rugs: Creative Recycling

An Introduction to Rag Rugs: Creative Recycling

by Jenni Stuart-Anderson
An Introduction to Rag Rugs: Creative Recycling

An Introduction to Rag Rugs: Creative Recycling

by Jenni Stuart-Anderson

eBook

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Overview

Making is good for you. Exploring crafts can be relaxing and therapeutic : the projects in this book are accessible to anyone who is inspired to recycle old clothes and textiles into unique, decorative, useful projects. Our forbears improvised tools to recycle their worn clothes - mostly dark suiting or mill waste if they lived near a mill. Usually they made mats for their cold floors or as draft excluders across doors. Nowadays you can choose from so many more colors and textures - painting with rags! Try one project or more. You will be able to use the techniques to design and make your own one-off items for your home or as hand-made gifts. The techniques here are traditional and simple - you will be surprised at how drab fabrics become transformed. Simple designs work best and you can even improvise as you work. If a fabric runs out, then use another - I call that organic design! Hooking is the best technique for pictorial detail and different techniques could be combined for original wall art. Historically, rugs were made by several people sitting round a horizontal frame with the children cutting the pieces of rag which were prodded into the hessian (burlap) backing to make a shaggy mat. There is a prodded project (for purists) but you can also achieve the same effect without a frame by progging, which can be done on table or thigh (carefully). Warning – this craft can be addictive!

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526780614
Publisher: Pen & Sword Books Limited
Publication date: 01/04/2023
Series: Crafts
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 84 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Jenni Stuart-Anderson worked in tourism, PR and architectural design. As a new mum, at home, she discovered rag rug making and got hooked. She has shared these vintage fabric recycling techniques since 1986 and believes in sourcing locally and walking lightly on the planet, Rag Rug Making was her first book, followed by Mare Rag Rugs & Recycled Textile Projects, aiming to keep the traditional craft alive by bringing it into the 21st century.

Table of Contents

Introduction 6

Acknowledgements 7

Chapter 1 Rags - How Did We Get Here? 8

Chapter 2 Designing Rag Rugs 21

Chapter 3 Tools and Equipment 36

Chapter 4 Materials 46

Chapter 5 Techniques and Projects for Prodding and Progging 54

Chapter 6 Techniques and Projects for Hooking and Punching 71

Chapter 7 Techniques and Projects for Knitting and Knotting 86

Chapter 8 Techniques and Projects for Coiling, Binding, Plaiting and Braiding 97

Chapter 9 Finishing and Cleaning Rag Rugs 113

Gallery 118

Places to Visit in UK/Suppliers 125

Bibliography/Further Reading 126

Index 127

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