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Aunt Martha's Hot Iron Transfers, for Embroidery - Edey's Vintage and Current Needlework
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Edey's Vintage and Current Needlework

Aunt Martha's Hot Iron Transfers, for Embroidery

If you like the simple embroidered designs you see on vintage aprons, dish towels, and pillow cases, chances are they were made from an Aunt Martha's Hot Iron Transfer pattern. These are the cute designs of cartoon characters doing the laundry, or shopping, or gardening, with a day of the week as part of the design, that you see on the dish towels. They are the beautiful flower garden patterns, like you see on pillow cases or aprons. There are designs for the kitchen to decorate pot holders, or curtains. There are antique car designs, Holiday designs, simple cross stitch, alphabets and numerals for monograms.  

The patterns range from elegant, in the cutwork embroidery designs, to whimsical, in the dish towel designs, to the fun and frolic of country folks having fun. Each packet comes with several designs printed on newsprint type paper, and can be used several times before fading. With the purchase of a transfer pencil, which is similar to a red wax pencil, you can then trace over the design and print more.

 The use of these patterns is not limited to embroidery. The designs can be imprinted on something  for use with paints or crayons, be made into appliques, traced for scrapbooking, or the old craft of woodburning; use your imagination to come up with many ideas.

To imprint the patterns on fabric, you need an iron and ironing board or similar padded board, some straight pins,(no plastic head pins, they will melt under the iron) and the washed fabric for your project. You cut out the section of the pattern you want, leaving a bit of space around the design for the pins, lay the pattern face down on the fabric, making sure it is the right direction that you want it to be, pin in place. From there follow the instructions on the package, but generally they are: Set your iron on cotton, use a dry iron (no steam or moisture), then when it is hot, apply iron, moving slowly back and forth on paper. Gently lift one corner of the paper to check for a clear stamping, and if it is you are done. Let cool and remove from fabric. If it isn't quite clear enough, don't move pins or paper, but apply iron again. That's it, you have a stamped piece ready for decorating.

These make a good simple project for doing basic embroidery. Choose some basic colors of embroidery thread, a pack of embroidery needles, a small embroidery hoop, and a cotton dish towel or a white pillow case and you've got a quick project for decorating or for a gift.

The Aunt Martha's patterns have been around for decades. They are in a yellow packet, and over the years have had a pink border, white border, green border or no border. The cost for a packet is about $1.00 to $1.50 new, and I've seen them in Wal-mart's crafts section with the embroidery thread. A Google search will bring up ones available on the internet.

Embroidery is a simple peaceful past time. Turn off the TV and start a project. Now is a great time for that. Enjoy! 

Edey

Comments

 

Pat said:

That brought back memories! It's been awhile since I embroidered a pillowcase, but I (still!) have some teatowels I thought I'd get done over the summer. Summer's come and gone and I did get the transfers ironed on but that's about it. I found out that Aunt Martha's iron on transfers are better quality than off brands. None of them are expensive, so it really pays to buy quality in this case.

October 20, 2008 4:08 PM
 

Edey said:

My oldest Aunt Martha packet is from the 1960's and doesn't look like the wax/ink lines have faded any. I did some research after writing this and found that the border colors of the packets signify different types of patterns - days of the week patterns have a red border, tea towels are blue, cross stitch is a black border. I think this must be a recent innovation as the old ones weren't like this. They have such fun designs. Edey

October 20, 2008 6:20 PM
 

cheapChic said:

I use the iron on transfer because I no artist when it comes to designs the needlework I can do that by using colored threads, I see alot of  the tea towels in a thriftshops

November 1, 2008 12:39 AM
 

Edey said:

I'm not an artist either so I rely on patterns to give me things to work on. Edey

November 10, 2008 10:34 PM

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