Fabric ripped into strips and ironed - it's good to have more than one fabric |
You need fabric + matching thread, polypropylene rope, a sewing machine, some pins and a small bulldog clip.
Polypropylene rope |
Then away you go ...
Sewing in progress! |
You can see how much rope is needed for one bowl! |
By the end of the day there were some lovely bowls ready for use! |
After our lovely bowling day I went home enthusiastic to make more. I decided I would use neutral fabric and stitch with neutral cotton thread and dye them. So that's what I did. After dyeing them all over, I then inverted the bowls in a shallow dye bath to get a contrasting colour on the rim.
An undyed bowl |
Finished bowls |
Here's what I learnt ...
It's quicker to use patterned fabric to get a colourful result and you don't need that much!
If you put a wet inverted bowl in the dye bath you get a rim that is just the area covered by the dye bath.
If you put the inverted bowl in dry the dye rises much further up the bowl but you get a nice shading effect ..
If you don't like the colour you have some scope to change it
Blue with green |
Becomes blue with black! |
and it can be quite addictive ...
Lots of bowls |
The printed fabric bowls have gone to new homes and after some more dyeing this is what I've ended up with in the dyed bowls line ...
In the end I made 8 bowls and used about 50m of rope. Hold on to your washing lines - they may not be safe with me about!
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