Weave Old T-Shirts Without a Loom

Reader Contribution by Linda Holliday
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Is it just me, or are there entirely too many T-shirts in the world?

Perhaps I had a few as a youngster, but the first I can truly recall was a white T-shirt with a rubbery photo of a Studebaker on the front. I wore it with stylish orange bellbottoms embroidered with butterflies. Because I was 14 and bought the shirt with my dishwashing earnings, I wore it until the emblem was gone and the fabric gray.

Now it seems, T-shirts are everywhere and often free, given out at fundraisers, sporting events and as advertising. Our local thrift stores receive so many donated T-shirts, they simply bag them up as shop rags. Trash bags packed full to the top sell for $4. Many of the shirts have never been worn.

Fortunately, there are a gazillion ways to those brightly colored garments. Jersey fabric of 100-percent cotton is so versatile. It can be stretched, sewn flat, weaved, hooked, crocheted, dyed, tied in knots, and, best of all, the ends don’t unravel.

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