Beat the Heat: Make A Cool Tie!
Beat summer's heat with this sew-simple craft project: a cool tie!
This bright cotton neckerchief has a summer secret: a filling of water-absorbing polymer granules from the garden center.
Soaked in water, the cool tie's polymer granules absorb more than 200% their weight in water. Tied around the neck or worn as a headband, a cool tie provides all-day cool relief through evaporation.
The cool tie is simple to sew, requiring only a straight-stitch sewing machine. It makes a great gift for gardeners! Our printable Cool Tie gift tag makes the gift fun.
Materials and Supplies:
- 1/4 yard 45-inch wide lightweight 100% cotton fabric
- 2 teaspoons Watersorb-brand polymer granules
(to order Watersorb-brand polymer granules, and for
more tips and information about making cool ties,
visit Watersorb.com's Cool Ties page) - thread to match
- sewing machine
- pins
- scissors or rotary cutter
- bamboo or plastic point turner
- printed copy of gift tag
Instructions:
Cut cut a 7"-by-45" rectangle from fabric.
For simplest cutting, fold fabric crosswise (selvedge to selvedge) and use a rotary cutter for a straight cut.
- Fold fabric strip in half lengthwise, right sides together.
To form pointed end, cut a 45-degree triangle from each folded end. Cut back from the fold toward the selvedges.
Locate the lengthwise center of the folded strip.
Place 2 pins 1 1/2 inches on each side of the center of the strip.
The pins mark the area to be left open to reverse the tie.
Sew from point to center on each side, with a 5/8th inch seam allowance. Leave the area between the pins open.
- Using scissors, carefully notch seam allowance next to the tie point.
Use a plastic or bamboo point turner to turn the tie inside out through the center opening. Press.
Measure 10 inches up from each pointed end, and mark location with a pin.
On each side, sew directly across the tie from end to end, backstitching at the beginning and end of the stitching line. This stitching creates a pocket for the garden polymer granules.
- Insert 2 teaspoons Watersorb-brand polymer granules into center of the tie through the opening in the seam.
(Yes, that is correct: only 2 teaspoons. The polymer granules swell nearly 200 times their size, and will completely fill the tie when wet. One pound of polymer granules will make more than 55 cool ties!)
- Stitching close to the folded edges, sew the opening closed.
For gifts, attach a copy of free printable gift tag.
To use, soak cool ties in water for about 45 minutes.
After the granules have fully expanded, pat the tie gently with a towel to remove excess water.
Tie around neck or head for cool relief!
| Safety note: According to Ted Douglas, Watersorb/Polymers, Inc., polymer granules used to construct cool ties are non-toxic and meet EPA standards for potable drinking water. While non-toxic, dust from polymer granules may lead to irritation if inhaled. Mr. Douglas recommends wearing a dust mask while filling cool ties. |



Comments
Cool Idea
love this idea for the summer heat, I am going to be making more then one. It gets so hot here in the summer, I'm talking, 3 months worth, this will be heaven. Both my husband and self enjoy gardening
and yard work, and even being outside just walking for exercise, and this will make our lives so much more enjoyable. Have been always trying to come up with something like this, and now you did it for me, so thanks a bunch and hope you get struck with more of these great ideas!
Odor?
I was thinking about buying some of these online after reading about them in a magazine, but many reviewers on amazon.com said that it gets a bad smell--I think a combination of human sweat plus moisture on fabric that doesn't get to dry out for too long.
Is there any way to prevent that? These cannot be washed in a machine (several reviewers had tried to rinse and dry them, but not always with success). I wondered if the granules could be put in a plastic ziplock bag, and the end of the wrap made with velcro, so you could slip the bag in and out easily before washing the wrap. Would that work, or would it defeat the cooling properties?
Odor
I would think that by just hand washing in mild detergent that this would solve the odor issue. NEVER put these in a washer or dryer. I would not recomment bleach either. Swishing around in soapy warm water should do the trick. There are fragrance oil or water based that can be used. I have never tried Fabrize but that might work too.
Cool Tie Odor?
I have several cool ties that I hydrate then keep in the fridge. After using a cool tie, I squeeze and rinse the tie under cool running water to remove sweat. I have had my ties for two years now and have not had a problem with odor.
I have always wondered how to
I have always wondered how to make these. A friend had them once and I thought they were so nice. I would like to make some and send them to my brothers who work outside in the desert. They would be perfect there becaue of the evaporation.