SNUG AS A BUG IN A BRAIDED RUG
Make unwearable or irreparable clothes into something useful like turning them into practical and comfortable braided rugs.
By MIRIAM FRAZIER KORSHAK
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"Snug as a bug in a rug". When Ben Franklin coined that
phrase it probably described exactly how he felt... sitting
in his platform rocker in front of a cosy Franklin stove,
with his head in the clouds and his feet resting warmly on
a braided rug.
The practical comfort of braided rugs would have been
completely compatible with the frugal and ingenious creator
of Poor Richard . . . they effectively insulate the floor
from cold and the eye from barrenness.
The beauty of it all is that braided rugs are just as
practical and just as comfortable now as they were 200
years ago . . . and you can probably handcraft a sturdier
one today for less cost and effort than ever before.
The trick is in salvaging the jetsam of a cast-off society
. . . unwearable or irreparable clothes—even old
blankets—can all be cut up and used.
Ideally, raw materials for a braided rug should be pure
wool . . . it even seems a little heretical to construct
one out of synthetics. Besides . . . wool wears well,
repels moisture, is warm and assumes a pleasing depth of
color.
Your own discards can provide the beginnings for a rug and
it's sort of fun—when the floor covering is
finished—to see some favorite piece of apparel having
a second lease on life. Friends, too, are likely
contributors . . . especially when reminded that something
of themselves will be braided into posterity. And don't
overlook old Army and Navy uniforms, which are 100% virgin
wool. There's a certain gratification to begotten from
cutting them up and making something
useful—finally—from the fabric. But the ripest
pickings of all are at thrift stores and rummage sales.
Thrift stores often have stock that's been on the rack too
long and rummage and garage sales, being short term
operations, must liquidate all inventory at closing time.
Not only are prime woolen pickings often absolutely free at
such a sale . . . you'll probably be thanked if you cart
them off on the last day of the event .
PREPARATION
Make sure your gleanings are clean before you cut them up.
There's no point in making a dirty new rug, and it's more
pleasant to work with clean materials anyway. Dry-cleaning
isn't necessary, however, even though the rug materials are
wool. Simply rip out major seams and hems, remove zippers,
buttons and trim . . . and send what's left through the
washing machine.
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