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Sunday, October 30, 2011
Tutorial: Soap Socks
I was at home waiting for news from my sister, Eithne Gingerbread, who was supposed to deliver unto the world a new baby today. The child has Eithne's sense of punctuality and thus took a good fortnight to appear on the scene, but finally did so in a whirl of drama this afternoon. Mother and child are doing well, hurray.
While baby Hannah was adjusting to the world, I was trying to get some odds and ends finished. So I'm going to do a series of little blog postettes about my craft fair endeavours. Most of what I'll show you in these posts will end up being donated to a Christmas bazaar in aid of the local children's clinic - as a result, they're quick and economical to make and rely heavily on a certain cuteness factor as a sales technique. Brace yourselves, crafters. Here we go!
Soap Socks
The idea behind these is that, as the soap shrinks with use, the wool felts through rubbing and the use of hot and cold water. I had loads of these finished, but everyone who has seen them so far has bought one or two off me - which is a good sign, but honestly I have to stockpile a little before Advent starts. They look cute. They smell nice. They're cheap to make (I buy the soap at Aldi - no one sees it because it's sewn into the soap). And even a novice knitter like me can make them.
You need:
felting wool (I can make 4 or 5 socks from one 50g skein)
and a set of DPNs/straight knitting needles.
(I used a size 5 mm.)
Cast on 20 stitches. Divide over four needles, or knit flat.
Row 1: plain
Row 2: purl (If you're knitting flat)
Repeat in stockinette stitch till you have a little tube the length of a bar of soap. Sew up the bottom opening. (If knitted flat, sew up the bottom and side.)
Alternatively,
Cast on 10/11 stitches on your trusty DPNs.
Row 1: Plain
Row 2: Kfb (knit front and back so you have double the amount of stitches that you started the row with)
Knit until the sock is *nearly* long enough to fit the soap, then
K2tog (knit two together) for one round, so you have 10 or 11 stitches again.
Cast off. Sew up the bottom opening.
Squeeze the soap into its little sock. Weave the tail of the yarn around the top opening and pull to close the hole. Weave in your tail. Thread a piece of cotton yarn in and out around the top hole and pull tight (as a drawstring), tie it in a bow.
(Wowzers. Knitting patterns are so simple to write, eh?)
Add a label.
Be fancy.
Voilà - or as we say in cyberspace: Waalah!
Here's a copy of a sample label as a Microsoft Word document here.
But does it work, Gingerbread Lady?
Well, here's the tricky part. Whether the soap sock actually works depends on a number of things. I've found that some soaps are too soft, they turn to mush straight away. Others are too hard to get up a good lather. In order to felt, the yarn needs friction, so the user has to be prepared to scrub hard to felt it! When I give these as gifts, I always say that they're best kept in a drawer among your underthings or linen: they make excellent scent sachets. The wool holds the scent for a long time and the soap normally has a very delicate scent.
That's the neatest idea - will be great for exfoliating. :)
ReplyDeleteThat's a really clever idea, great stocking fillers!
ReplyDeleteThank you, girls! I've been too frugal and mean to try one myself - haha! - but I spotted the idea ages ago while on the Interwebz and mentally filed it away under "I can do that" :-)
ReplyDeleteAwesome! I bet i can do it on my bond knit machine will give it a go one of these days thanks!
ReplyDeleteWelcome Hannah, and congratulations to your sister and her family.
ReplyDeleteNeat idea :D The soap socks that is, not the baby. Although babies clearly are a good idea. I had four!
I am liking this....looks faster than my scrubbies that are multiplying to stick in pressies for the festive season... The label makes it though. Really nice.
ReplyDeleteLiz
@ Liz - yes, they're fast. And I'm not a great knitter. Because it's felting yarn, you can work it up quickly on big needles.
ReplyDelete@Annie - four babies! You've probably had hundreds of bars of soap go through your fingers over the years!
Thanks for sharing! These look very cute. I might make up some for holiday gifts.
ReplyDeleteHow much do you charge for these?
ReplyDeleteHi Audrey,
ReplyDeleteI donated a basket of these to a charity and they sold them for €3 each. They cost 80c to make - yarn 40c, soap 30-40c. I would adjust your price according to how expensive your soap and yarn are. I could buy yarn on special offer for €2 a skein and got 4 - mostly 5 - socks per skein. You can use expensive soap and then you'd obviously have to charge more. How that compares with US prices I'm afraid I don't know.
I love this pattern. Made 4 yesterday. Am making a bunch in red, pink and white to give for Valentine's Day. Its better for you than candy...
ReplyDeleteA little late to the party, but better late than never. It seems Baby Hannah and I share a name as well as a birthday, how wonderful.
ReplyDeleteAnd I love your soap socks!
Cheers,
Hanneke
They are gorgeous. Can you use a different yarn other than felting yarn? When the soap is finished, do you throw the bag out?
ReplyDeleteThanks
Linda
Hello Linda,
ReplyDeleteYou can use cotton, for example, which won't become smaller as the soap is used, but it can be washed and refilled.
The idea is that the bag felts into a smaller felted bag that can be re-used by putting soap scraps into it. I simply use these as scented sachets for my clothes drawers, as the wool retains the smell of the soap really well, so I've never actually felted a bag myself :-) :-)
This is a lovely patter, thank you so much for share!
ReplyDeleteYou could actually start these out as a toe-up sock and then just put your soap in and then weave in the tail to close it up. Great idea, will have to get some started with the few hundred left-over pieces of sock yarn.
ReplyDeleteAnyone have a way to tie these off so you can reuse them?
ReplyDeleteHi Chanel,
ReplyDeleteI'm so sorry for the long delay in replying, life just overtook me and tripped me up.
I simply thread a darning needle with embroidery floss or a thin ribbon and thread it in and out through the cast off stitches, pulling it tight to create a drawstring. The floss/ribbon won't felt and you can reuse the little bag then without a problem.
Hope this helps :-)
This is a great idea. I purchase hand made soap from a friend who makes it (wearetarts.com) and regular soap bags are terrible once the soaps becomes small pieces. This will solve that problem and since I usually use an acrylic cloth for washing because it exfoliates better than cotton and doesn't get that sour smell, switching to wool will be no problem at all, in fact I prefer it. Glad your little soap bag was posted on Facebook and that I saw it.
ReplyDeleteThese are great. Just the sort of thing that I love - knitted and smelly. Now I know what I will be gifting to my work pals. Thanks for this!
ReplyDeleteI am allergic to wool ... could I use Cotton?
ReplyDeleteI hope I can make these before Christmas, I make soap and this would be great to sell with them.
ReplyDeleteHi Joan,yes you can use cotton ... Of course it won't felt, but it would create something like a little washbag and would probably look very pretty as well!
ReplyDeleteI'm new to knitting. I searched felting wool on eBay but it just comes up with 'tops' not yarn you can knit with ( I think! ) any advice on where to get felting wool in uk?
ReplyDeleteLady, you ROCK! I don't knit but i AM going to work up a crochet version, for all my very pretty (and very many) scraps of wool. I've done the cotton soap-bag thing, but all comments are correct -- they get smelly, small pieces fall out, and also, the cotton stretches when wet. I love it when i find something so ingeniously simple, it tickles me pink! Thanks -- you made my day!
ReplyDeleteLyniHop - you're welcome! I just added a bit of extra info to the post and a link to my labels, so I hope this is useful for you, too :-)
ReplyDeleteTracie FK: I live in Germany, so the only company in Britain that I've personally used is Deramores. They do have felting wool but - and I think this is probably why you can't find it when you look for it - it's filed under 'FILZWOLLE', which is the German word for 'felting wool', but they seem to have it recorded as the name of the wool. Here it is:
ReplyDeletehttp://eu.deramores.com/catalogsearch/result/index/?p=1&q=filzwolle
I've just looked at a German site that sells the wool and it's MUCH cheaper there, €1.95 a ball for a unicolour yarn, as opposed to 5.39 GBP!!But the delivery costs €13 from Germany to the UK.
http://www.wool-more.de/lp.php?submit=&keywords=filzwolle
If you need help with the German translation, just let me know!
Seems someone will use labels that say something about 'Tickled Pink'.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to have found you even if never making the soap sock.
Now it's in MY memory bank.
TY! and congrats on niece.
Thanks very much for sharing, especially the labels <3
ReplyDeleteI love these! Thank you so much for posting this!!
ReplyDeleteHi, what about knitting the sock like 5 times bigger and then felting it/them in hot water until you get the desired size ? When dry put the soap in and sew shut? Just an idea...
ReplyDeleteThat's one way to do and I'm sure the effect would be nice as well. It's also an extra step in their production and one I don't think is really necessary because I personally prefer the look of the knitted fabric to felted fabric. Plus, I have a front-loader washing machine and have never yet managed to felt anything without creating a giant mess so I'd rather not! :-D :-D
ReplyDeleteHello,
ReplyDeleteCan I make the soap socks with regular superwash wool? I live in the high arctic and I cannot order without paying through the nose on delivery fees. I have a few skeins of superwash wool and a box of homemade soap from a gf.
Cheers,
Deirdre
Hi Deirdre,
ReplyDeleteTo be absolutely honest with you, I use these primarily as scent sachets. I have found that the felting results vary from soap type to soap type and it became too hard to find out a consistent method to felt them ... you could of course, use superwash wool but be aware that the original idea - that the bag would gradually felt and become smaller as the soap is used up - won't happen because, obviously, the wool won't felt. However, on the other hand, you could present them as small scent-holders for clothes or linen cupboards. The wool preserves the smell really well for a really long time and I've found that most people are reluctant to use them as soap anyway because they look too nice :-) Especially if it's handmade soap, someone might feel more comfortable keeping it somewhere safe, rather than letting it get wet and squishy in the bathroom.
could I crochet them? How many stitches? Help! I dont knit
ReplyDeleteI love this pattern. Made 4 yesterday. Am making a bunch in red, pink and white to give for Valentine's Day. Its better for you than candy... cheap automatic soap dispenser
ReplyDeleteI made some of these last year and my co-workers went gaga over them. I went to get some Cascade 220 to make one for a hostess gift this Thansgiving and the ladies at the yarn shop hadn't heard of it before and asked that I bring one to show them. They were super excited!!
ReplyDeleteI prefer to use the Oil of Olay bars, and Cascade 220 yarn. It takes me about three hours of very relaxed knitting/Netflixing to finish. I also use magic loop to get the job done, double pointed needles frustrate me a bit. Plus you must finish with the paper wrapping, it really makes the gift special.
Happy Holidays and Happy Knitting,
Fidalgo Girl (Ravelry name)
I want to try to make these. I wonder if I used mohair wool instead, as I have loads of it? Thank you.
ReplyDeleteHello Valerie,
ReplyDeleteThe only way to get a definitive answer to this is to try it :-) I personally have my doubts, though, because mohair is a very hairy wool and would probably be very sticky when wet - hairy soap mightn't feel that nice. But I've never tried it so you'll just have to experiment, I'm afraid!
Great idea. I’m going to make some right away. But I’m frugal so I’ll close one end with a draw string so I can refill the sock with another bar, or slivers of soap.
ReplyDelete