These Lovely Lavender Sachets from Jen Hagedorn
make great gifts for family and friends. Drying lavender for sachets is
so easy! Put these sachets in closets and drawers to keep your clothes
smelling lovely!
Materials:
Instructions:
Materials:
- Dried lavender bunches
- Fabric squares
- Ribbon
Instructions:
- Bundle lavender into bunches about as thick as your wrist so
they aren't too crowded. Rubber band the stems, pretty tight, because
they lose some volume as they dry and you don't want them falling all
over the place.
- Slip another rubber band through the ones holding your bunch,
then loop it by pulling one end through the other to form a hanger.
- Hang them in a dry place out of sunlight. Put a piece of
newspaper on the floor beneath them to catch the flowers that fall as
they dry. You don't want to waste any of these fragrant beauties! In
about a week they should be crisp but still have their color and
fragrance. Take them down.
- Put the bunches in an old pillowcase. Rub gently, like you are
rolling the bunch, and the flowers will separate from the stems. Collect
the flowers in an airtight container.
- For fabric, you can use pre-pinked charm squares, you can cut
your fabric using a pinking rotary cutter, or you can use pinking
shears. I like them no larger than 5" on a side and no less than 3".
- Lay two pieces wrong sides together. Use a 5/8" seam allowance,
and beginning 5/8" from one edge, sew three sides using a straight
stitch. Don't forget to backstitch at the beginning and end, and end
5/8" from the unsewn edge. Choose a thread color you like, because your
stitches will show on your sachet.
- Now fill it. You don't want to fill it too full or you won't be
able to sew it shut, and you'll just be wasting lavender because a
little goes a long way. 1 ounce should do it, which for my 5" x 5" charm
square is about 1/2 way full.
- Keep the lavender packed down away from your unsewn edge, and
then sew the remaining edge, being sure to cross over your original
stitches, and backstitching at the beginning and end.
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