Silk organza press cloth

Silk organza press cloth with a red ribbon loop in the corner

I was reminded while I was sewing the other day that I really do need a press cloth. This is a piece of fabric you put over your work when you are pressing seams, to keep the fabric from potentially getting scorched. We used them in my sewing class with Gertie a few years back, and I seem to recall they were silk organza. I’ve seen this recommended in a few places because silk has a high burn point and it’s transparent enough to see your work through it. I looked them up recently online but couldn’t really find any for under $20 AUD. Then today I found myself at Spotlight and realised I could make my own. They had one bolt of silk organza at $47/m, so I bought 30cm of it for $14.10. Then I cut it into three pieces of roughly 12″ x 18″ (31cm x 46cm) and overlocked the edges to keep them from fraying too much. I also cut a tiny bit of ribbon and put that in the corner so you can hang it up. That’s one for me, and two for friends for < $5 each!

Overlocking silk organza on a Singer overlocker

Overlocking a ribbon loop into the corner of a piece of silk organza

Comments

One response to “Silk organza press cloth”

  1. Kate C

    My home economics teacher taught us to use “J cloths” as press cloths. (Cellulose cleaning cloths). The upside of using them is that you can see through them, you can wet them to create steam, they take high heat, and they are cheap! I still use them. They last a long time and if you get fusible adhesive on them, you can toss them and grab another.

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