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Rug Hooking with
Cindi
Gay |
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Don’t Miss the Last Step – Label Your RugsWe invest so much of our time, money and energy into our rugs. Be sure to do the last step and label your rugs. Like you, many of the rugs I make are very personal and have a story to tell. I want the story to stay with the rug. My first workshop was at Sauder Village the summer of 2000. I saw the pattern for the first time at the workshop. Our teacher, Jule Marie Smith, encouraged us to personalize the pattern. It was a tree with a crow looking down at a “deer-dog.” I immediately thought of all the times my husband went hunting in the hills of West Virginia during deer season and came home empty handed. He was a good woodsman and accurate with a gun so his lack of success was a mystery to me. When our daughter was old enough to join her dad, the problem became clear. After loading his pockets with goodies, dressing warmly in the morning chill, and walking the hills to his favorite spot, David settled down under a tree. He folded his arms across his chest and was asleep within minutes. Jenny never went hunting again. As she put it, “There are bears in those woods!” and she didn’t want to be alone while her father slept. This was a family story worth documenting. I added my sleeping husband to the pattern, hooked his gun leaning against the trunk of the tree with the West Virginia hills and sunrise in the background. Now all I needed was a label. I didn’t trust my ability to write out several sentences plus my name, the date, and the other important information in black permanent pen. So I turned to the computer, designed my label, and trusted the quilt and craft shops to have something to transfer it to fabric. About that time I received some information from ProChem. They had a new product that was perfect. The catalog read: “Bubble Jet Set 2000 prints permanent color images on 100% cotton and silk fabric using your ink jet or bubble jet printer. We’ve found that it works best with Canon, Epson and Hewlett Packard printers/cartridges. This is an exciting and inexpensive way for you to prepare your own fabric sheets for printing. One bottle prepares approximately 50-60 sheets that measure 8 ½” x 11”. The fabric also maintains its original feel and texture. Quilters! This is a great opportunity to customize your quilt labels.” Well, this sounded good from a rug hooking point of view also. After following the steps included with the product, I had a wonderful label. An Ohio Star border surrounds my detailed story that will not be forgotten. To purchase Bubble Jet Set 2000: www.prochemical.com (The dyes we use for wool are the washfast acid dyes.) PRO Chemical & Dye 1-800-2-BUY-DYE PROChem’s Steps: (My notes are in Italics.) 1. Shake well and pour solution into flat pan. 2. Saturate fabric in solution for 5 minutes. (I use unbleached muslin. It’s 100% cotton and usually on hand.) 3. Allow fabric to dry. (Drip dry overnight works great.) 4. Iron fabric to smooth side of freezer paper. Cut to size to fit your printer. (Cut the fabric and paper a bit larger and trim to the exact size after the paper is ironed on with a rotary cutter or razor knife.) 5. Print on treated fabric and let sit for 30 minutes. (Put a mark on a piece of paper, load it into your printer, and print something. This will tell you which side the fabric needs to face.) 6. Machine wash (delicate cycle) in cold water with a mild detergent. Another quilting tip for crisp straight labels: Place a spent dryer softener sheet over your label so that you can see the label through the thin sheet. Stitch with the sewing machine completely around the label. Tim seams and corners. Cut a “X” carefully through the dryer sheet only and turn the label right sides out. Press. Now it’s easy to stitch on your rug. You will not be fighting with the loose ends and the label will stay square. Written for the National Guild of Pearl K. McGown Rug Hookrafters, Inc. Newsletter, Summer 2002
I originally printed my labels on muslin, but I found a better fabric, see The Right Fabric Makes a Big Difference.
Copyright © 2003 by Cindi Gay. All rights reserved.
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