The Rope Rug
Using a rope-making machine to make fabric ropes for a rag rug.
January/February 1977
By the Mother Earth News editors
When it comes to attractive, foot-warming floor coverings, you just can't beat an old-fashioned Colonial-style throw rug. "Especially," says MOTHER staffer Travis Brock, "one that you've made yourself—for pennies—from recycled rags!"
RELATED ARTICLES
CHECKLIST FOR ENVIRONMENTALLY RESPONSIBLE DESIGN AND MATERIAL SELECTION
June/July 2000
Issue...
Making a simple kite from recycled materials is fun and inexpensive. And there’s nothing quite like...
All around you there are sources for free or inexpensive materials that are perfectly suitable for ...
It can be fun and easy to ditch plastic grocery bags in favor of reusable canvas bags. It's an easy...
Two months ago—as "The Incredible Rope-Making Machine" (MOTHER NO. 42, pages 36—37) was being written—MOTHER researchers Travis Brock and Dennis Burkholder came up with a right smart (we thought) idea: "Why not use the rope-maker," they suggested, "to twist ordinary rags into 'fabric ropes' that a person can—in turn—make into a Colonial-type oval rug?"
Well, we're pleased to report that the boys' idea has—in the ensuing two months—materialized into a brightly colored 3' X 4' floor covering . . . the very one, in fact, shown on this page! For all you would-be rug-makers, then, here's a quick rundown of how Travis and his wife, Linda, managed to create this lovely "rope rug" . . . with tips on how you can duplicate their success.
A RAG IS A RAG IS A RUG
"The authors of the two rug-making articles in MOTHER NO. 12 both say that wool is the only suitable material for a floor covering of this sort," explains Travis, "but Linda and I happened across a large quantity of double-knit polyester and decided 'What the heck . . . let's use it.' "
First, the couple washed the approximately 30 square yards of fabric. (No one likes a dingy rug.) Then Travis and his wife [1] cut the laundered cloth into two-inch-wide strips, [2] separated the strips by color, and [3] stitched like-colored strands together with bias seams (that is, seams sewn at a diagonal). "You could butt the ends of two pieces together and sew 'em straight across," explains Linda, "but you'd end up with unsightly, hard-to-manage lumps in the finished cordage."
Next, Linda and Travis selected three color-coordinated strips of fabric of equal length (anywhere from 20 to 80 feet long) and folded them in half lengthwise. "Then," says Travis, "we got out the Incredible Rope-Making Machine, slipped the strips' folds over the machine's three hooks, and tied the rags' loose ends together behind the 'Y'-shaped separator/holder." (See Photos 2 and 3.)