| Retro Fun: Fancy Border Tea Towels |
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| Editor: Liz Johnson | ||||||||||
| Friday, 07 May 2010 03:00 | ||||||||||
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As with so many things ‘tea related,' the Tea Towel comes to us by way of Great Britain where it originated as a special drying cloth for expensive tea services. Linen was the fabric of choice because its smooth, simple weave was unlikely to scratch fine china or glass. Servants were usually charged with hand hemming and embroidering the tea towels. Their embellishment ranged from simple hand stitching to extremely intricate embroidery. Besides drying, the towels were also often used as a cozy – wrapped around a tea pot, or as a basket warmer – wrapped around or laid on top of a serving bowl to keep scones, cakes and biscuits warm. Our Retro Fun Tea Towels with their fancy Simply Sweet fabric borders are more casual than their noble ancestors, but are still a wonderful addition to any kitchen and a perfect gift for a wedding shower or house warming.
This is a great project to use up leftover fabric scraps. A BIG thanks to our new friend, Barbara Jones, the designer of the beautiful Simply Sweet fabric collection for Henry Glass & Company. She very generously provided all the fabric for our retro kitchen projects, and has it all in-stock and available for order on her site, QuiltSoup. We looked at a lot of fabrics for this series, but Barbara's designs are the ones that jumped right off the page as the perfect vintage kitchen combo. There are additional colorways and designs within the collection. Check it out. Sewing Tools You Need
Fabric and Other SuppliesAll Simply Sweet fabric is available at QuiltSoup Supplies listed are for THREE towels Tea Towel #1:
Tea Towel #2:
Tea Towel #3:
Getting StartedWe've given supply notes above for all three towels; the instructions show just one towel. Repeat them over and over for as many towels as you'd like to crank out.
At Your Sewing Machine & Ironing Board
Contributors Project Design: Alicia Thommas Other machines suitable for this project include the Brother LX-3125 and the Husqvarna Emerald 183.
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Comments (8)
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Denise Vining
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... So cute!!! I've been looking for something that I could make that was fun and useful to give my girlfriends for Christmas and this is it!!! Thank You so much for sharing!!! |
Nanci
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... I make reversable table cloths and like to make a set of decorated kitchen towels to match. Adding a pot holder really completes the kitchen set. |
norskie3
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kimpe
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... I love this and what a wonderful idea for the young brides I have bridal showers coming up for. Are there any fabrics out there that are bleach safe since this is going on a kitchen towel? I don't know if my future DIL's would know as to whether or not to bleach a fabric and I would hate to have them ruin the towels and then feel bad. Kim |
Liz Johnson, Editor, Sew4Home
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... Hi Grapevine 1992 -- the technique above works best with the thinner linen towels. For a thicker towel, I'd suggest something like we did with our Nature Brights kitchen towels: http://sew4home.com/projects/kitchen-linens/505-nature-brights-kitchen-triple-border-dish-towels or perhaps with an even simpler single ribbon accent, like our bathroom hand towels: http://sew4home.com/projects/bath-linens/74-fabric-trimmed-towel-set-in-toile Hope that helps. Have fun, and let us know how yours turn out! |
Grapevine1992
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... Beautiful! Would this technique work if I wanted to sew a border on the bottom of a purchased microfiber towel? I wondered about using a thin cotton fabric to border the more fluffy microfiber. Thanks for your help! |





















. You could go on to suggest that a stain stick could be used to for spots that get onto the white tea towel portion. Hope that helps. 