It is the chain Giant here in the DC area. Not sure how widespread they are, and not even all of them here have it. They have their occassional glitch, but for the most part, I really do like it.
It is the chain Giant here in the DC area. Not sure how widespread they are, and not even all of them here have it. They have their occassional glitch, but for the most part, I really do like it.
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It's worth noting that shopping bags are easy to make even if your sewing skills are minimal. The seams need to be strong, but that's easy to accomplish.
Don't use cotton because it takes a long time to dry if it gets wet.
Pam
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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I know you're kidding, but I saved ALL the sewing-related whoozits that my late mother had. So much better made than stuff we buy now. I wish I could have kept her 1950s Kenmore sewing machine, too; I'm sure you could sew sheet metal with that thing.
Now my work table -- that I found in the garbage and hauled home on my dog's Radio Flyer (which I use instead of a cab) so just in case it was made in China I get a pass.
Pam
My favorite shopping bag is the one my mom made for me. I suppose as shopping bag designs go it's rather elaborate, with its nice flat bottom and box-like folded corners. I don't know if she actually used a pattern or just made it up. But anyway, it's beautiful and I've been using it for some 20 years now.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
I am a quilter and have made a bunch of bags over the years. I never get plastic at the grocery store and these are great. They are definitely kept in my car and I leave them near the back door so I remember to put them back in the car.
Here is a link I found for all kinds of different bags. If you plan to stuff them and they are heavy, I would use webbing all the way around to the bottom. Look at them and find one you like. There are some really simple ones and some more elaborate ones, but I really like the #10, using a heavy fabric, denim (recycle old jeans), or canvas.
http://tipnut.com/35-reusable-grocer...free-patterns/
PS. Am I dumb or what? I want to start a thread and cannot for the life of me find where to do that. Can someone help, please!!!![]()
Very true!
I used to sew a lot, then haven't had a sewing machine for the past 12 years or so.
A few weeks ago, someone gave us an old 1970's Sears Kenmore machine that had a broken pedal and had lost its table that it fit into. It wobbled on 3 'legs' since it was not intended to stand alone. It had some other weird issues too.
We bought a manual for it. My husband made a new plate for the pedal and got it working, and he made a another leg for it so it could stand alone without wobbling. We took things apart and logically figured out the other little problems it had and fixed those. There were a couple of strange adjustments that someone had done to the working parts long ago, but we corrected them. Then we cleaned and oiled it and adjusted the tension.
Now it works great!! It's got all the fancy stitches too. I bought new needles and bobbins, etc. I just hemmed up some jeans shorts.
Many of those parts inside machines today are now made of plastic instead of metal, and I think this machine must surely be better made than the ones today.
So now I have a nice smooth running 'recycled' sewing machine.![]()
Last edited by BleeckerSt_Girl; 05-01-2009 at 05:42 PM.
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
I didn't think of making my own bags too. That's a great tip. I am a hack at sewing. But, I could probably make a bag. My mom's old Kenmore was a 1970s model. In my basement, in need of work. Wouldn't let DH throw it out.
BUT, the best is my late grandmother's sewing machine. It's still at my mom's. I told her she has to put it in the will to me lol. It's a Singer manual foot pedal style (late 1800s as far as I can tell). OMG... it's just *beautiful* though old and worn. Still pedals to sew though.
That was my only grandma living that I knew. I have a farm bonnet she made me as a child we would wear in the garden together (sun protection). That woman could sew you up a whole mess of re-useable shopping bags in no time flat (eyes closed probably lol).
I think my bag makes a good "misc junk collector" spot in the car too. Versus making the purse so heavy to carrry.