Dashing away with the smoothing iron…

Yuk.

Yuk.

I think it might be time to clean the iron, and fit the new ironing board cover.

This is what happens when you use a lot of synthetic fabrics and iron-on interfacing. Things melt and stick, and you’re left with a mess.

That’s why I usually buy the cheapest iron I can possibly find, and then use it until it’s either beyond cleaning, or the heating element burns out. Domestic irons aren’t designed to be used for hours and days at a time, so this tends to work out to a buying a new one every eighteen months or so.

I know that a lot of dressmakers swear by heavy-duty steam-generating irons. I’ve used them before, but find them too heavy for my bad wrist. I also find that the water tanks get full of limescale and the steam eventually leaves dirty marks on your fabric. I use a simple plant sprayer, using it to dampen either the fabric, the ironing board cover, or a separate pressing cloth. A nice hot iron on top creates plenty of steam.

When I (eventually) finish work on my current costume project and switch to my lovely organic cottons, I’d like to give up using iron-on interfacing altogether. Hopefully that should help my irons to last a bit longer – and make a lot less mess!

What a Difference an Iron Makes…

Blue organic cotton dress - before

Without wishing to put anyone off the idea of buying my organic cotton fabric, this is what it looks like when it comes out of the washing machine. In these days of synthetic fibres and “easy-iron” fabrics, this might come as a bit of a shock.

Blue organic cotton dress - after

Thankfully, a few minutes with a nice hot iron can work wonders!

I know that plenty of people will be looking at this and thinking “why bother?”, especially when synthetic blends and surface coatings can reduce or even eliminate the need for ironing altogether. From a personal point of view, I’d much rather wear a natural fibre such as cotton than a synthetic one, even if it does require a little more effort on my part. Let’s just not talk about the little mountain of crumpled shirts sitting in the bottom of my wardrobe, waiting for me to get around to doing the ironing…

Oops.

Oops.

This is just one of the reasons why I don’t like using synthetic fabrics. This is a polyester taffeta that I accidentally melted with the iron. The iron wasn’t even too hot – it just stuck to the fabric, and in milliseconds this was the result. Oops.

Now I have two irons that need cleaning. The dressmaking iron has melted taffeta stuck to it, and the household iron has something unspeakable burnt onto the ceramic sole plate. While I’m at it, I might make two new ironing board covers. The one in my sewing Shed is all gummed up with interfacing glue, and the one in the house is terrible – it pops off the board at every available opportunity, making ironing a shirt an exercise in wrestling. No fun.

Once the iron’s clean, I can carry on with the coat that I’m making. Hopefully without melting any more holes in it…