T-shirt Rug

What does one do with the backs of the t-shirts that go into your t-shirt quilt? I went with rags and finally rag rug.

Verdict: total win. Even my first error-riddled rug is cozy, kind of cute, and feels great between me and the kitchen floor. The stretchiness that came from using women’s t-shirt fabric is fun, but if I had to criticize I’d say it’s very slippy on linoleum tile. This is a rug you can surf around your kitchen on.

Inspired by gifting one of those potholder looms to a small child. Check out the quality of that edging!

Instructions for making the rugs can be found at other blogs, so let’s talk about the loom. The easiest possible loom is a repurposed hoola hoop, but I have no kids (so no convenient hoop) and also wanted a square rug. Suggestions for square looms seemed a little excessive and specific. I didn’t want semi-permanent nail-filled planks hanging around, so I made a temporary loom out of pegboard and two-inch pegs.

The yarn threads are joined by looping adjoining pieces through slits on the ends. If done carelessly this results in nubbins that you can feel in the final product – those get stamped down and are far less noticeable after a bit of use.

This was a bit of a pain – those pegs do not all stay snugly in their holes – but worked out well in the end. The only problem was 100 pegs was nowhere near enough to make a large enough rug. At first I was hopeful but when I removed the rug from the loom I lost a good two inches or more off each dimension. My kitchen rug is comically small now. I ordered 100 more pegs and will give it another go as the quilt progresses.

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