I know its not quite that simple, I’d have to make thread first, and after I get enough make clothing out of it. Could this actually be done? I can sew, but never made my own clothing nor have I ever made thread, so I don’t know if it could actually be done or not. I’m 100% sure the time and effort would not be worth it, or money spent on stuff to produce the thread, etc. But looking at my lint garbage pale made me wonder.
One use for lint is as a fire starter.
You can just use it as is and light it and it works great.
Or you can soak the lint with Vaseline, then store a small bunch of it into a sandwich Ziploc bag and keep it for emergencies or camping.
Because it’s so good as a fire starter … always check your dryer for excessive accumulation.
Earthwormjim91@lemmy.world 1 year ago
You can’t spin thread from it since the fibers are too short.
But you can use lint for felting.
hedgehogging_the_bed@lemmy.world 1 year ago
As someone who spins and felts, the fibers in lint are too short for felting too. Both spinning and deleting require the fibers be long enough to tangle and lint is the broken pieces of fibers that have fallen out of threads already. You can get it to stick together like felt but it won’t ever be sturdy like a felt because the fibers can’t get wrapped around one another or tangled up. Like trying to give dreadlocks to a guy with a buzz cut.
Some people use dryer felt to add color to felted things they have made but I think of lint like the crumbs at the bottom of the cereal box or chip bag.
spittingimage@lemmy.world 1 year ago
How does felting work?
CobblerScholar@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Ever rolled lint in your hands and then it shrinks and gets denser? It’s kind of like that just more controlled. You’re tying a bunch of tiny knots in the fibers and letting friction keep it in place
blazera@kbin.social 1 year ago
Ive seen thread spun from it before