I bought various types of dish towels over the years. None of them (100% cotton or not) would wipe water cleanly. I was frustrated.
But I knew something that would! Old cotton t-shirts. Cleaned every drop of water in a single wipe! So I decided to convert them. And you can too!
Tools: Pinking shears, 2 identical sized pieces of plywood, 4 clamps, old worn cotton t shirts.
The pinking shears were a laugh. I recalled my mom decades ago mentioning to me that they were for making cloth cuts that didn't fray. So I went to a craft store and asked for one. They had no idea what I was describing. The clerk brought me to the fabric expert. She thought they were for decorative cuts. I actually had to demand to know where the scissors were.
I found a pinking shear (Fiskars, good brand). It said right on the package :for non-fraying cuts". I showed it to the "expert". She was surprised.
Where do they find these people? It was a specialty store!
Anyway, I went home with the pinking shears.
I cut 2 pieces of plywood (plywood stays flat) smaller than the T shirts. The identical size is important.
So, I placed a plywood board on a bench (raised for easy rotation).
Placed a T shirt on top
And the other plywood board on top.
Clamped them hard on the corners.
Cut around the edges of the plywood...
Voila' - 2 pieces of non-fraying cotton dishtowels...
I have 12 of them. Just the first has stayed unfrayed and amazingly absorbent after a week's use. They aren't for cleaning, just water-wiping. Use those bad dishtowels for cleaning.
I am quite pleased with myself.
Besides, I hated the grey T shirts, LOL!
My next project is a mailbox delivery notification device. There are commercial products and some DIY devices I've seen online. I can do better.
UPDATE: Megan asked a good question in her comment (as she so often does): "Why was it so important to you to cut the cloths the same size?"
Answer: It wasn't; it was only an outcome of my process. To explain...
I cut a piece of plywood sized to maximize the area of usable T-shirt (4th picture above, avoiding the seams at the arms and neck). I cut an identical sized piece of plywood in order to hold the T-shirt firmly between the 2 pieces.
I did THAT only so that I could cut cut the cloth easily using the edges of the plywood as a guide.
The result was identical-sized pieces of cloth from each T-shirt . Not important, just the result...
I hope that clarifies things. :)
Showing posts with label Inventions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inventions. Show all posts
Friday, February 10, 2017
Monday, September 21, 2015
It Worked, Part 2
So here is the soil-scraper thing I made. A close-up first... The aluminum plate has 2.5" to dig in. And it is definitely sturdy.
The board isn't warped; that's a macro camera setting effect. It's a 2"x10"x4' board; heavy and straight.
Here it is upside down so you can see it. Its wider than the lawn mower.
Here it is as used. The front of the board and the aluminum plate both help drag soil around from the high spots to the low ones. I didn't plan for the board to help, I just got lucky.
Sorry I don't have a "before" picture, but imagine 6" deep furrows... Here is the "after" picture.
There are mower treads there, but there is 4" of soft soil under it. I will soak the soil with a lawn sprinkler and then transplant some existing tall perennials before scattering wildflower seeds. I have 250" of plastic edging to define the wildflower area.
The board isn't warped; that's a macro camera setting effect. It's a 2"x10"x4' board; heavy and straight.
Here it is upside down so you can see it. Its wider than the lawn mower.
Here it is as used. The front of the board and the aluminum plate both help drag soil around from the high spots to the low ones. I didn't plan for the board to help, I just got lucky.
Sorry I don't have a "before" picture, but imagine 6" deep furrows... Here is the "after" picture.
There are mower treads there, but there is 4" of soft soil under it. I will soak the soil with a lawn sprinkler and then transplant some existing tall perennials before scattering wildflower seeds. I have 250" of plastic edging to define the wildflower area.
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