To sew a kitchen potholder you will need:
• pieces of fabric in four different colors;
• thick bike fabric;
• tape measure;
• pencil;
• needles;
• threads;
• scissors;
• iron;
• sewing machine.
Two pieces of a square with 21 cm sides are cut out from large shreds of fabric, and a circle with a diameter of 12 - 13 cm is cut out from a red piece of dense matter.
A cotton strip of material 7 cm wide and 144 cm long is also required. The width of the selected fabric is divided in half, a line is drawn along the entire workpiece. On this line, 3.5 cm segments are marked and drawn perpendicular to the main line. On the other side, the strips recede 1.9 cm from the edge and set a dot. From the point, along the line, they mark out the segments of 3.5 cm and draw. Next, the workpiece is cut in short lines to the main line. The resulting squares are folded into a corner, fixed with a needle and ironed with a hot iron. It turns out a braid from the corners.
On a beige square in the center, place a braid in the form of a circle, fasten and sew on a typewriter with a zigzag seam. Two small pieces of flannel fabric are superimposed on the wrong side of the red circle. The prepared element lies in the center of the square, fastens and is sewn on a typewriter.
From the remaining braid along the red field, another circle is laid out and scribbled in a zigzag machine.
For the second tack piece, a square gasket is cut out of the bike with a side of 18 cm. The gasket is sewn onto the part from the inside.
A strip of red fabric folded in a loop is placed on the corners of the first part of the product. Then both parts are folded facing each other, stitched along the edge, leaving one side of the workpiece not sewn up.
For ease of turning, the product corners are cut to the seam line. Through the hole left, the tack is turned on the front side and the rest is sutured. Such a bright and useful little thing can be sewn from "nothing."