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One Small Change – Reusable Sandwich Bags

Editor’s Note – I have joined Hip Mountain Mama’s One Small Change challenge for 2010. The challenge is to make one change each month leading up to Earth Day, April 22. It can be small or it can be huge, something I will do to make a positive green impact and follow through with it.

Note to My Family – I’ll be dragging you along with me!

If every one of my readers would make four changes between January and April, can you just imagine the effect?

If you want to be a part of this amazing and life changing challenge, pop over to Hip Mountain Mama for details.



I answered Mountain Knitter’s call a few weeks ago over at Sustainable Homestead, actually committing in writing my plans for a Greener household in 2010. One committment was to totally ditch plastic baggies and paper napkins. I already had several dozen cloth napkins which I pulled out from the back of the linen closet and put back into service in our kitchen. I spent yesterday afternoon making a stack of reusable sandwich bags for my family, a MUCH better use of my time than watching the Cowboys get their frannies kicked by the Vikings. (What a total embarressment!)
I spent some time online looking at all the reusable sandwich bags available out there. I wanted bags that are simple, shaped like a real sandwich bag (no folding required, no ties, no velcro to capture crumbs) and simple to care for. I really liked Mountain Knitter’s version; my teen daughters wanted something a little spiffier, so I improvised a little and came up with my own version.

To help the rest of you with your quest for a Greener household, here’s a tutorial to make your own. If you’d rather not sew, or if you don’t own a serger, pop over to Mountain Knitter’s etsy shop Sustainable Homestead and pick up a few of hers.

Reusable Sandwich/Snack Bags – Makes eight

Materials:

  • 1/2 Yard of nylon rip stop fabric for lining
  • 3/4 Yard of cotton fabric for outside of bag -OPTIONAL!!
  • Wooly Nylon thread for serging edges

Tools:

  • Rotary cutter, mat and ruler
  • Serger

NOTE: the cotton outer fabric is OPTIONAL; you can make the baggies from a single layer of nylon ripstop. I used a cotton outer layer because a) my daughters wanted “fancy” bags, and b) I had stash fabric available.

Instructions:

1. Cut 7″ x 18″ rectangles from the nylon ripstop (liner) the cotton fabric (outside).

2. With liner and outer fabric placed wrong sides together, serge a rolled edge across one short side.

3. Fold rectangle in half, with the serged edge on top and lining fabric facing in. Turn down the serged edge about 1-3/4″, leaving a 1-3/4″ flap at the top. Pin in place.

4. Starting at the bottom, serge a rolled edge up one side of the bag, catching the folded section, across the top and down the other side. Trim threads and you’re done!


5. To close, tuck the flap in and fold over the opposite edge, just like the “oldfashioned” sandwich bags that existed before Ziplock came along.

To clean – shake crumbs out daily, toss in wash when needed. Enjoy!


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Seven Red Things

I’ve been tagged by Su!
Two simple rules:
1. Post photos of 7 red things in your home.
2. Tag 7 people to do the same.

Teen Daughter#1’s Pillows

Teen Daughter#2’s Makeup Bag

Darts in the Sunroom

Funky berry sprays, also in the Sunroom

Classic Cookbooks!

Carved wooden mug and spoons from Russia

Apples in the family room
I tag Julie with the awesome select focus camera lens, Darling Petunia, Toby who doesn’t have a blog, but who will be a guest poster here at my blog, Hillary, Care who I dare to post seven red I Spy squares, Tami who Wants to Play Too, and Beccy.

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Wordless Wednesday – Upcoming Tutorial