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I am going to make a first attempt at offering a tutorial.
I have made these before but had to trial and error my process again and want to save it for the future. I was embarrassed at Thanksgiving when I opened the drawer to get my hot pads out in front of guests. The ones I have didn't look very nice. I decided I need to fix that before Christmas.
You will need:
-Fabric for the top- embroidery samples, quilt blocks, plain fabric, either cotton or heavier home dec type. I started with some machine embroidery samples and also used some pieced fabric that was leftover from a quilted jacket. I cut my squares 7 ½ inches.
-Cotton or cotton blend quilt batting scraps, also can use 2 layers of flannel, cut same size as top square. Poly batting is not as heat resistant as cotton, so you might burn your fingers and it may melt.
-Old cotton bath towel, cut in squares 1 inch smaller than top pieces, mine were 6 ½ inch squares.
-Backing fabric, I used home dec cotton… also denim, duck… same size as top fabric.
-I used a size 16 or 18 sewing machine needle.
Here are my embroidery sample squares cut out for the top .
You might notice that the embroidery samples have issues, I was trying out colors, that's why they are samples. These are potholders, it won't matter!
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And batting cut to fit
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Here are are the smaller toweling squares. The size difference is so the thick towel is not caught in the side seams at all, easier sewing.
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Lay a piece of towel on top of a backing fabric square and pin at the sides.
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Turn over and sew across from corner to corner. I just eyeball it. You may need to lengthen your stitch a little.
And remove the pins.
Place a top square with batting, right side up, and put a backing square with toweling, right sides together.
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Using a straight stitch and ¼ inch seam allowance, stitch around 4 sides, leaving a couple inches open on one side for turning. Use a narrow foot or your zipper foot if possible, so the foot is not riding on top of the towel piece. I sew from the toweling side.
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Clip the seam allowance at the corners straight across
Then clip again at an angle to reduce bulk after it is turned.
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Turn the right sides out and push out the corners gently. I use a point turner, but a chopstick, knitting needle, or crochet hook all work, too.
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Press the square flat and turn under the opening and press.
Then clip again at an angle to reduce bulk after it is turned.
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Turn the right sides out and push out the corners gently. I use a point turner, but a chopstick, knitting needle, or crochet hook all work, too.
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Press the square flat and turn under the opening and press.
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Topstitch across the opening and around all 4 sides, using a little less than ¼ inch seam allowance. It’s easier if you are not sewing through the towel layer.
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Finshed! Now go throw away your stained, scorched, old hot pads and don’t be afraid to use these when you have guests at Christmas!
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