I saw an ironing tote today
#1
One of the ladies in our Strips and Scraps club brought her project in a tote bag that she'd made and it had the silver fabric that a lot of ironing board covers are made of on one side. That side wasn't quilted but still had a layer or two of warm and natural in it. The other side of the bag was quilted strips. And both sides had a backing(the inside of the bag). It had a binding along both sides of the top then binding was used all the way around the three closed sides to connect them. The handles were made into the top binding. Once her project was taken out her tote became her pressing surface. It was about the size of a fat quarter and I thought it was pretty cool. Has anyone ever seen these? Or do you have one?
#3
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(I just did a search and does it look like this one
http://www.ericas.com/sewing/patterns/totes.htm is this it???
http://www.ericas.com/sewing/patterns/21399b.jpg
and this is the description
Pressing Spot & Iron Tote
Make your personal pressing spot to carry along to classes, club meetings and retreats. The board reverses to the silver Teflon coated "Quilted Iron Quick" fabric. The same fabric lines the iron tote to insulate your hot iron for the trip home. There is even a pocket to keep the cord away from the hot iron. Pack up and go without waiting for your iron to cool!
21399 $9.00
http://www.ericas.com/sewing/patterns/totes.htm is this it???
http://www.ericas.com/sewing/patterns/21399b.jpg
and this is the description
Pressing Spot & Iron Tote
Make your personal pressing spot to carry along to classes, club meetings and retreats. The board reverses to the silver Teflon coated "Quilted Iron Quick" fabric. The same fabric lines the iron tote to insulate your hot iron for the trip home. There is even a pocket to keep the cord away from the hot iron. Pack up and go without waiting for your iron to cool!
21399 $9.00
#4
Originally Posted by craftybear
(I just did a search and does it look like this one
http://www.ericas.com/sewing/patterns/totes.htm is this it???
http://www.ericas.com/sewing/patterns/21399b.jpg
and this is the description
Pressing Spot & Iron Tote
Make your personal pressing spot to carry along to classes, club meetings and retreats. The board reverses to the silver Teflon coated "Quilted Iron Quick" fabric. The same fabric lines the iron tote to insulate your hot iron for the trip home. There is even a pocket to keep the cord away from the hot iron. Pack up and go without waiting for your iron to cool!
21399 $9.00
http://www.ericas.com/sewing/patterns/totes.htm is this it???
http://www.ericas.com/sewing/patterns/21399b.jpg
and this is the description
Pressing Spot & Iron Tote
Make your personal pressing spot to carry along to classes, club meetings and retreats. The board reverses to the silver Teflon coated "Quilted Iron Quick" fabric. The same fabric lines the iron tote to insulate your hot iron for the trip home. There is even a pocket to keep the cord away from the hot iron. Pack up and go without waiting for your iron to cool!
21399 $9.00
#6
I used to do the mystery blocks on www.paperpanache.com and one of them was a cute little garden fairy. I used it to sew up a little quilted tote bag & then cut & made a similar size bag from an old ironing board cover. I take this anytime I want to tote my iron along, and if it's still warm I can just carry it along in it. I suppose I could use this as an ironing surface as well, but I usually have my small June Taylor cut'n press board with me.
#7
My group made these with 1 FQ quilted to 2 layers of thinsulate ( you can use warm and natural, not polyester)any way you want Cross hatch, free motion, or just lines. then sandwich with that shiny stuff heat reflective that you see on readymade ironing board covers. We buy it here in local fabric shops.Then you bind it with double fold binding. Voila you have your own personal ironing surface.They are great for gifts.
#8
#10
Originally Posted by EasyPeezy
Like this one, maybe? (Scroll down)
http://fairholmequilters.blogspot.co...1_archive.html
http://fairholmequilters.blogspot.co...1_archive.html
I wonder how 'cool' the iron needs to be in order to put them in the totes without the iron burning the liner?
WARM but not HOT . . . maybe?
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