Bark-eater
40 Cal
I was just given 4 decrepit blankets. Their house blankets and 3 of them have satin trim on the ends. I did a burn test on the fuzz and there's no plastic in them. They have stains and small moth holes, and where in a mousy out building, so they need some sort of cleaning.
3 are peach/salmon colored and the best one is pale yellow, so some sort of dying will happen, though the peach/salmon color is close to some of the faded madder cloth I've seen.
I figure theses would be good material for making leggings and some sort of insulating layer, but there's not an immediate project I need the wool for.
So the immediate question is how to "process" these blankets to be put away till in ready to start a project.
I was thinking about machine washing with castile soap, air drying and then moth balling them in trash bags. I figure I'll loose some to the moth holes opening up, but after a month with moth balls I'd hope the eggs would be dead.
Or should I just wash them hot and toss them in the dryer and start with a fulled material, that will end up twice fulled after dying in a hot solution?
My present "blanket chest" is a plastic Hardigg container and a bunch of different blankets and wool old garments are in there. Everything is trash bagged individually and there's a 3-4 mothballs in the bottom of the chest incase some eggs hatch in one of the bags. I don't want to toss anything that's actively infected in with the rest.
Here's a very unscientific color match to matter, printed off the computer with a cheap printer.
3 are peach/salmon colored and the best one is pale yellow, so some sort of dying will happen, though the peach/salmon color is close to some of the faded madder cloth I've seen.
I figure theses would be good material for making leggings and some sort of insulating layer, but there's not an immediate project I need the wool for.
So the immediate question is how to "process" these blankets to be put away till in ready to start a project.
I was thinking about machine washing with castile soap, air drying and then moth balling them in trash bags. I figure I'll loose some to the moth holes opening up, but after a month with moth balls I'd hope the eggs would be dead.
Or should I just wash them hot and toss them in the dryer and start with a fulled material, that will end up twice fulled after dying in a hot solution?
My present "blanket chest" is a plastic Hardigg container and a bunch of different blankets and wool old garments are in there. Everything is trash bagged individually and there's a 3-4 mothballs in the bottom of the chest incase some eggs hatch in one of the bags. I don't want to toss anything that's actively infected in with the rest.
Here's a very unscientific color match to matter, printed off the computer with a cheap printer.
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