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    Old 08-24-2011, 02:07 AM
      #61  
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    I grew up on a chicken farm. Mama made our clothes from the feedsacks. I wore feedsack "drawers' till I started school. Mama's aunt bought me & my sister store bought panties.My brother got store bought underwear too.I found an old quilt top made with feedsacks & washed feedsacks for the back, at a yard sale.Sun bonnet Sue pattern.
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    Old 08-24-2011, 02:52 AM
      #62  
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    Originally Posted by dphelps
    Here is a quilt that I need to restore and I am hoping that flour sacks are suitable.
    I have some pieces of fabrics you might be able to use. They are some I saved from old aprons and some spokes from some antique Dresden Plate blocks that I bought on ebay. You can also purchase some small checked cotton gingham and use that for some. I think Joanns only carries the checked gingham in a cotton,blend but think I have seen 100% cotton at Hobby Lobby and online. Please send me an aside if you want to share a bit of the old fabrics I have.
    I think that quilt is absolutely beautiful.
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    Old 08-24-2011, 05:27 AM
      #63  
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    This is a great thread...thanks for all the stories
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    Old 08-24-2011, 08:47 AM
      #64  
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    Originally Posted by dtippens
    any pictures of these flower sacks
    Do you ever go to ebay? Look up flour/feed sacks. There usually are tons of pictures of sacks,either opened or unopened for sale.
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    Old 08-24-2011, 10:44 AM
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    When my Aunt was a girl way back in the 20's she died her hair with coffee and tea, :?
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    Old 08-24-2011, 02:25 PM
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    I remember going to the feed store with my father and picking out the sacks that I liked. It took two sacks to make a gathered skirt!
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    Old 08-24-2011, 04:24 PM
      #67  
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    Originally Posted by Campbell34
    When my Aunt was a girl way back in the 20's she died her hair with coffee and tea, :?
    My DM said her 'old-maid' great aunts rinsed their hair with tea after every shampoo, looked perfectly natural and never showed a grey hair. ;)
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    Old 08-24-2011, 04:39 PM
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    I mixed a home brew "suntan lotion" with instant tea one summer. It was the only summer I ever got a tan. LOL
    The tea dyed my skin just enough to look like a natural tan. It didn't protect against sunburns.

    You might use some of the reproduction prints in that dresdan plate you are working on. I like the antique green. I think Keepsake Quilting has some of the reproduction prints and some solids. Post a photo when you get it finished.
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    Old 08-25-2011, 01:37 AM
      #69  
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    if you want a variety of colors and dying techniques go to ritdye,com - I happened on that site by accident and got so excited when I saw all info they had - have been making some of my own batiks
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    Old 08-25-2011, 09:41 AM
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    Originally Posted by amma
    After tea or coffee dyeing, I let them drip dry and then throw them in the dryer for about 30 minutes to set the "stain." Then wash and rinse them by hand to get out any excess tea/coffee :D:D:D
    I found out the hard way that THIS - what you suggest above - is a critical step in the dyeing process to ensure the dye "sticks" rathers than runs out with the rinse water after a project is finished. Oy.
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