The Miracle Household is blessed with an overabundance of t-shirts. When I can no longer close Michael’s shirt drawer, he weeds out the ones he doesn’t wear and sorts them into two piles: dust rags and memorabilia. As an individual who neglects house work with such natural ability (I’m thinking of turning pro), I only need so many dust cloths.
So what do I do?
What any knitter would do: make yarn.
It’s actually not that hard.
First, find yourself some t-shirts. Qualifications: no side seams, minimal decoration. Stitching and ink will keep the jersey from doing the curling trick. You’ll need a ruler, scissors and one of those disappearing ink fabric markers (in a pinch, and if you don’t care about permanence, ball point pen also works).
Cat is optional.
Cut the bottom of a t-shirt straight across under the arm holes (or under the printing) and slice off the bottom hem. You now have a loop of fabric with two raw edges. (You also have a cropped shirt that would have been awesome in the 80s and a way to restrain prisoners. But for knitting purposes, you only need the loop.)
Flatten the loop into a rectangle as best you can, smoothing out the wrinkles, and arrange it with the raw edges to the left and right. Fold the loop in half so that the bottom edge rests about an inch beneath the top edge.
This is so you don’t have to try and cut straight for two feet.
Now, you don’t have to get out the T-square and go all crazy precise with this next part, just be as neat as you can. Using the ruler and fabric pen, make marks one inch apart along the bottom edge and then along the edge that used to be the bottom edge.
Any width is fine, but don’t try smaller than 1/2inch: it breaks.
Get your scissors and cut strips from bottom mark to top mark. Be careful to clip through the marked top edge, but not all the way through the inch of buffer at the top of the fabric. The object is to make one continuous strip of t-shirt – not a bunch of loops.
William Henry, mind your own business!
When you’re finished, it folds out into a hula skirt.
Which gives me another idea for another time.
Now comes the trickiest part.
Open it all out so that you can isolate the inch margin where the strips are still hooked together. You want to make sure not to cut anything but the margin in this next step. Make diagonal cuts from one strip to the next.
Once you get the first one made, the rest are easy.
Then you’ve got a big spaghetti mess that needs to be wound into a ball. As you’re winding, give the strip a nice stretch. It’ll do it’s jersey trick and curl right up.
Jersey is just tiny tiny stockinette after all.
And you’ve got yarn! With 1″ cuts, I got about 26 yards from each large and extra large shirt.
Slice up a pile of white tees and you could make a garter stitch bath mat. Or if you have a bunch of colors, why not try a log cabin rug (Mason Dixon Knitting style). I made a toy, of course.
I’m a one trick pony these days.
I’ll never knit a t-shirt toy again. Knitting this stuff in a gauge small enough to conceal stuffing was rough on my wrists. This frog is one of a kind.
Next Earth Day, I’ll make a bath mat.
*Note: Cutting t-shirts into yarn isn’t my original idea by any stretch of the imagination. I’m sure there are a ton of tutorials out there much better than mine. If you find yourself saying “Whaaaa?” about my instructions, Google!
Holy cow! I wish I’d thought of this a month ago — we gave my sis and her family at least 20 t-shirts we’d gotten from the Red Cross. Ah well. This is a great idea anyway!
Nice way to recycle! You are so clever!! You DO know why the frog was difficult to knit, right? Like Kermit said, “It’s not easy, being GREEN.” 🙂
Cute froggie…sorry he was so hard on you!
I love the colors on your frog 🙂 Also, very clever with the t-shirt yarn.
You are so hip . Great earth day post. Love the frog. Is there a cricket in the future? My new dog Cricket wants to know…
That frog is too cute! And I am so glad you didn’t use the t-shirts for cleaning your idea was so much better.
Cute frog! Thanks for this idea. I have a bunch of tshirts that need to move on. I already have made enough cleaning rags and paint rags to last a while, but I still have tshirts that need to go.
What a clever idea, no matter who’s it was. 🙂 And your frog is awesome!
My daughters love to wear our t-shirts as nightgowns; the few that we’ve gotten tired of seem to have become theirs now. 🙂