Green Sewing Ideas for Your Kitchen

Sew food storage bags Nancy Zieman

Green Sewing Ideas for Your Kitchen

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Sew food storage bags Nancy Zieman

By Emily Jansson, Nancy’s Notions Guest Blogger

Prolong the life of produce and cut down on your disposable plastic bag use by sewing breathable bags. Creative green projects make perfect gifts, and they’re a fun fashion statement at farmers’ markets, too!

Porthole Mesh Bag

Make this pretty bag with a fat-quarter and Porthole Mesh.
Sew food storage bags Nancy Zieman
These mesh bags are super-duper EASY to make. It’s just a drawstring bag made out of mini mesh fabric, with 3/8″ double-fold bias pulls. Add a pretty label or a touch of embroidery to make it your own. Trust me, everyone will be totally jealous of your fashionable “eco-prowess.”
I made a couple bags with French seams and the Garden of Plenty embroidery designs, just for fun.
Place a bunch of veggies and fruits in your mesh bag, and you’re ready to go.
Want to crisp up your greens? Try soaking the cotton mesh bag in water, wringing it out, and stuffing it with some lettuce or kale. Place it in the fridge an hour or two before you eat and watch it crisp up as if it were freshly picked. No kidding!
Generally, vegetables stored in a breathable bag, such as a cotton bag, will keep fresh longer in the refrigerator. Washing your produce only as you use it also prolongs its freshness and quality.

Vegetable Drying Mat

Speaking of washing your veggies, how about sewing a fruit and vegetable drying mat? Use preshrunk waffle cloth and cotton batting for the mat. It’s a tree-saving alternative to paper towels, which also saves produce from bruising as it dries.
Sew food storage bags Nancy Zieman
Simply stack a sandwich of fabrics like this:

  1. Waffle cloth
  2. Cotton batting
  3. Waffle cloth

Baste fabrics together, bind the edge with a pretty cotton fabric, and you’ve got a machine-washable, eco-friendly drying mat. It’s great for drying hand-washed dishes, too!

Plastic Wrap Alternative

Use a nontoxic alternative to plastic wrap—try wrapping your sandwiches in a natural cotton that has been waterproofed in all-natural beeswax. It’s very easy to make!
Sew food storage bags Nancy Zieman
These water-resistant wraps work well to wrap over bowls, fold around sandwiches, or roll up cheese and bread in. The heat from your hands helps to conform them to any shape—and they are seriously fun to make!

  • Wash cotton fabric on hot (dry hot) to preshrink and remove sizing/fabric treatments.
  • Press fabric flat and cut out squares that are 14″ x 14″ (or any size you choose) with a pinking shears or pinking rotary blade.
  • Cover a large, flat baking sheet (must be larger than your fabric square) with parchment paper, and lay the fabric on it.
  • Sprinkle beeswax pellets sparingly on top of the fabric. You don’t need to cover the fabric completely with beeswax—the pellets will spread out quite a bit as they melt. Place the baking sheet in the oven at 175 degrees. Bake fabric for approximately 5 minutes, until the wax pellets have melted.
  • Use a clean piece of cardboard to spread the melted wax around so that the whole piece of cotton is covered. If the wax cools too quickly, place it back in the oven for another minute or two, and repeat process.
  • Keep your waxed fabric sheets clean by sponging them off with mild dish soap, and rinsing in lukewarm water. Hang or towel dry the wraps, and they can be used over and over again.

That’s it!

Reusable Snack Bags

Stitch up a few reusable snack bags, too. I used a layer of PUL fabric for the inside of the bag, and then a fun, colorful cotton for the outside.
Sew food storage bags Nancy Zieman
You can find a tutorial for snack bags at this link.
To clean, turn them inside out and place them on the top rack in the dishwasher (gentle cycle is best).

Handy-Dandy Bowl Covers

Store your meals (and spare them from flies for an outdoor table) with these handy-dandy bowl covers.
Sew food storage bags Nancy Zieman

  • Use a compass (like the Yardstick Compass) to draw a circle with a radius that’s 2-1/2″ wider than half the diameter of your bowl onto a piece of pattern paper. Example: 10″ bowl: 1/2 diameter= 5″ + 2-1/2″= 7-1/2″ radius to set on the compass.
  • Follow this simple formula to determine the amount of elastic needed: (Diameter of your bowl) x 2.25 = the length of elastic to cut.
  • Cut one circle from a cotton print, and the other from PUL fabric.  Match right sides together, and stitch ¼″ from the edge—leaving a hole to turn right side out. Turn to the right side.
  • Stitch a scant 3/8″ casing around the edge of the circle.  Thread elastic through the casing with a safety pin or bodkin. Stitch ends of elastic together, and topstitch the casing closed. Voila! Perfect for fridge storage, picnics, and barbecues.

For more green ideas for your kitchen, check out this Pinterest board.

Thanks for sharing these great tips, Emily.

Bye for now,
Nancy Zieman The Blog

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10 Comments

  • Nina
    May 17, 2016

    Love these ideas and can hardly wait to make the beeswax bags. Where do I purchase the beeswax pellets? Thank you.

    • Maria H
      May 17, 2016

      Thank you, Nancy, for the wonderful Eco-ideas. I look forward to making all of them…they are ALL my favorite.

  • Maria H
    May 17, 2016

    Nina…you can get the beeswax pellets at a craft store like Michaels, as well as on line.

  • Margaret C.
    May 17, 2016

    The vegetable drying mat could also be used to catch the water off the dishes in the dish drainer. What is good is that it can be made to fit and have a whimsical binding. Thx

  • Deb
    May 17, 2016

    How about bowl cozies, tortilla warmers, potato bags and dish draining mats?

  • ROBIN, TX
    May 17, 2016

    I don’t quite understand the last instructions for the bowl covers, beginning with the very last instruction (casing and threading elastic, and topstitching it closed).

  • Carla M.
    May 17, 2016

    Nancy, I love all of these ideas! They will come in handy here at home as well as they will also be great gifts! Thank you!

  • Chris
    August 12, 2017

    re: mesh bags w/ French seams….
    Never been able to figure out how to make a draw string top w/ a French seam. These instructions to sew the simple bag don’t have a close up of the top of the bag to figure it out myself…..
    I am very curious how it’s done, and would be grateful for an explanation. Thank you.

  • Donna Fecteau
    August 14, 2017

    My mom used to make the bowl covers. My dad was a smoker and when he would burn a hole in our plastic table clothes, mom would save them. Then she would cut them up into circles and make different size bowl covers for her pyrex bowls. Sometimes she made shower caps out of them as well.

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