Flour Sack Dishtowels |
Sunbonnet Baby from our Redwork Club |
Dancing Dishes Days of the Week Design |
Grandma had flour sack towels for every day use, and flour sack towels with embroidery work on them that she "saved for good." When she taught me to embroider at the age of 9, she traced a design on a flour sack towel and showed me how to make days-of-the-week sets to put in my hope chest. It was like finding an old friend when we discovered a source for these old-fashioned flour sack towels. I find myself using them almost as often as Grandma did.
These 100% cotton flour sack towels are designed to be bleached and to withstand many trips through the washing machine. Each towel measures 28" X 28" and is made from Egyptian cotton, a long staple cotton that is super absorbent.
Flour sack towels are available individually or in packages of seven. Seven may seem like a funny number for a bundle of towels, but not when you consider the popularity of those Days of the Week embroidery patterns for stitching onto these towels.
Grandma's Attic has everything you need to stitching these towels. The towels themselves, Aunt Martha transfer patterns, redwork patterns, transfer pencils and tracing pads. It's a fun, relaxing way to make gifts for family and friends--or to "save for good" in your own hope chest!
2 comments:
Thanks for sharing with us about "old-fashioned flower sack towels"
Before I got married, I spent a lot of time embroidering tea towels. Love the 7-days of the week plus flowers of all kinds. They are not in such good shape as then but the fact that I've been using them for 56 years and figure they will last a longer. The thread is still pretty bright as well. I did mine in all different colors. esidwpa
I think it's fantastic that your flour sack towels have lasted for 56 years! A customer gave me a set of towels that her mother had used for years. I was amazed at how soft and inviting they still were after all this time!
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