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Felted Sweater Potholder
From CRAFT
This project first appeared on the pages of CRAFT or on Craftzine.
Make a potholder out of old wool sweaters.
- Author: Tiffany Threadgould
- Time required: 1 hour
- Difficulty: Easy
Agitating wool in water causes the fibers to bind onto each other and shrink. The great news is that this binding action creates a dense, soft material whose raw edges won’t fray. This is known as felting.
The next time your favorite wool sweater accidentally slips into the wash and shrinks to oblivion, take another look. See it as raw material for your next craft project. You might even start shrinking sweaters on purpose.
Wool is a natural fire retardant, so it works well as a potholder. That doesn’t mean you should put it directly on a flaming stove, but it will resist fire better than cotton or polyester.
Sections
- Felt your sweaters.
- Cut your pieces.
- Assemble the potholder.
- Blanket-stitch the perimeter.
- Finish with a running stitch.
Tools
Tools (continued)
Relevant parts
- View:
- Paginated
- Full width

Edit Step 4
— Blanket-stitch the perimeter.
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Thread your needle with embroidery floss and tie a double knot. Start a stitch to the left of the hang tab and about ¼" from the edge. Then pull the floss up and around in a loop, coming out at the same starting point. Thread the floss through the top of the stitch.
Stitch up and around, making a second stitch about ¼" from the first. Before pulling the floss tight, bring the needle through the top of the stitch.
Continue stitching ½" from the previous stitch and bring the needle back through the loop before you pull the stitch tight. Stitch around the entire perimeter of the potholder in this way.
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