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Decorating a kitchen: an embroidered pot holder

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Decorating a kitchen: an embroidered pot holder

Not only will an embroidered pot holder protect your hands from scalding but also make your kitchen look lovely. In the course of our collaborative projects, the participants are required to embroider any of the kitchen or table textiles of their choice. No need to do something complex, as one can always make a pot holder.

An embroidered pot holder. Materials

  • Sole-colored cotton, 2 pieces
  • Printed cotton, 1 piece
  • Tearaway adhesive stabilizer
  • Upper thread
  • Underthread
  • Scissors
  • Cotton lace
  • Padding material

Materials and tools for making a pot holder

An embroidered pot holder. The making process

I used two sole-colored pieces of different fabrics for the embroidered part and for the back part of my pot holder, with a binding. I could have cut the front and the back parts out of the same fabric, as it would look more natural if the whole thing was white. But I didn't have the necessary amount of white fabric, and therefore, I supplemented it with beige one.

Let’s embroider a design first. Stabilize your fabric and hoop it. Select your threads (I do it beforehand, and sort them in the order of sewing), and start the embroidery. While the machine is going, you can make yourself a cup of coffee, pausing occasionally to change the thread.

Embroidery machine embroiders a pot holder

Once the embroidery is ready, unhoop the fabric and do the cutting. Natural fabrics, being heat-resistant, are preferable. My pot holder was a simple square one, with no bells and whistles. As for the batting, felt, wadding or drape cloth are most common, but if you don't have any of those, and you only plan to use the pot holder for the decoration, you may use polyester batting instead.

Attention! Polyester batting is highly thermal conductive and has a low melting threshold.

You’ll need to cut two square pieces, one sole-colored and one printed. Don’t use vividly colored prints; the fabric should not distract attention from the embroidery. It would be better if one of the colors of the fabric will match one of the main colors in your design.

Out of the embroidered piece, cut out a pocket with seam allowance, so that the design is right at the center. Lay a piece of lace on top of it, facing into the right corner. Cut with allowance, in case it shifts during sewing, and you don’t want to rip it off.

Prepare the binding. It is usually cut on a bias, but if you don’t have enough material, you may use a simple rectangle instead.

First, I stitched the batting and the beige fabric for the back part of my pot holder. These are simple square pieces, no difficulties here. You may mark them for better alignment, but I did it by eye, and it came out fine.

Quilted pot holder back side

Then I stitched the pocket and the lace to the front part. I ironed out the edging so that it would sew easier, pinned the corners and carefully stitched along the edge. Now be very careful and make sure that the stitch goes along the top edge of the binding in one go and doesn’t slide down the lower one. If you set your machine at a low speed and keep steadying it along the way, it will come out fine. Be extra careful at the corners (alas, I didn’t manage to achieve perfection here).

Corner of a pot holder with binding

I don’t like basting and step-by-step stuff, all this dilly-dallying just doesn’t agree with me. But if you prefer to work that way, you can baste the thing first.

Cut your binding a little longer than the perimeter of the pot holder; we’ll make the surplus into an eyelet. Your pot holder is ready! You may insert your favorite recipe into the pocket.

An embroidered pot holder with binding and lace

An embroidered pot holder in the kitchen

Original text by Mary Stratan

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Recommended Comments

Mila Oost

Members

Thank you very much! It is some new for me, because I never before made kitchen accessories.

51 minutes ago, Mila Oost said:

Thank you very much! It is some new for me, because I never before made kitchen accessories.

This one must be easy ) A good thing for a start.

Ostviertel

Members

Wieder ganz toll erklärt.  Das bekommt jetzt auch ein Anfängerprima hin  

 

By using a pot holder you cannot even make your kitchen lovely in appearance but it protects your hands from the scalding. For making a pot holder use the two colored fabric, one for the embroidered front and other for the back and it looks natural. But you can choose the same fabric for both parts. First of all stabilize the fabric and then hoop it. Then choose the thread and start the process. You can make any design by using an embroidery machine. Keep in mind that your fabric must be heat resistant.

An embroidered pot holder is very useful to protect the hands and makes a kitchen seem lovely. It is heat-resistant that’s why people prefer it. You don’t need to create a complex embroidered design to make your pot holder unique. A simple design can create a flawless effect. Try to use the two different colors for front and back. A contrast color thread looks amazing for decorating the pot holder.

One can print the design according to your choice it is not necessary to print the design on the center or side. An embroidered pot holder is very useful to protect the hands and makes a kitchen seem lovely. It is heat-resistant that’s why people prefer it. You don’t need to create a complex embroidery designs to make your pot holder unique.

DIGITIZING ZONE

Members

To create an embroidered pot-holder tries to use the two different colors for front and back. A contrast color thread looks amazing for decorating the potholder. Keep in mind that the color of the embroidery Digitizing should match at least one color in the print. Print the design according to your choice it is not necessary to print the design on the center or side.

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