Turning Recipes Into Tea Towels (2024)

Looking for a great idea to create a custom gift for someone special this holiday season with a sentimental touch? Here’s how turning recipes into tea towels created a perfect gift this year.

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Do do ever dream of giving the best gift ever?

You know, the kind that when they open it up, they either squeal with delight or cry tears of joy. It’s so awesome that people shake your hand, raise you on their shoulders and break out into song.

Too lofty of a dream?

Maybe a bit – but I did want to give an amazing gift to my rock star Mom. One that I knew she would cherish. I knew it needed to be handmade, sentimental, and affordable!

I stumbled upon this awesome idea from Spoonflower.com. Spoonflower makes custom fabrics, wallpaper, and decals from your designs. Not only that, but they also have a huge catalog of gorgeous prints you can choose from. You can also order other patterns created from custom designers.

It was this beautiful tutorial from Emma fromHello Beautifulwho shared how to turn family recipes into tea towels.

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Picture from spoonflower.com

Emma gave a wonderful tutorial of how to upload your pictures, the correct format needed for printing the desired amount of fabric.

This gave me a wonderful idea to make for my momma! So here’s what I did to create my DIY tea towels.

Turning Recipes Into Tea Towels

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Step One: Choose Your Design

First, I chose a recipe special to my mom. This is a recipe card from my Great Grandmother in her handwriting that was given to my Mother at her bridal shower years ago.

It was a cookie recipe, but what was so special about it was the back.

There were quotes from my Great Grandmother about marriage. For the Bridal shower, they were supposed to give a quotes for the bride to be – recipes for a happy marriage, again in her handwriting.

Isn’t that precious? I just loved this!

So I used those quotes as the second towel.

I had a copy of this for my own recipe book.

My recipe card was a bit bland, so I added the scrapbooking backing and embellishments to add color.

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Step Two: Build your PDF

Then I went to my favorite photo design builder, PicMonkey, and created a design that works with the fabric parameters. Simply scan your recipe cards and upload them to PicMonkey. Using their design tool, I was able to play around with my pattern.

I planned on ordering Spoonflower’s linen-cotton canvas for durability. It comes in a 54″ wide area. According to their site, 54” x 36” will fit exactly on one yard of the linen-cotton canvas and will produce 4 tea towels.

Now for a bit of figuring. You need to add spacing for your cuts and hem lines. I set my PicMonkey design to fit their fabric parameters. I created a solid background to match my photos and made sure everything was centered and even. Also, turning your pics 90 degrees helps get the most of the fabric.

Once you are satisfied, download your creation in pdf format.

Here’s how my creation looked. (tip – download in a high quality format so that your print doesn’t look pixelated.)

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Step Three: Order your fabric

Head to Spoonflower, and upload your pdf. Select the amount you want, and the fabric type and add it to your cart.

I ordered a 1 yard cut.

If you have time, you can order a test swatch to see how it will look before you finalize your order. However, I didn’t have time so this was the first batch.

Step Four: Sew your tea towel

Then I waited.

With baited breath – dreaming of that gift giving moment for my mom.

The fabric arrived in about 10 days and was absolutely GORGEOUS! It was exactly as the design planned. I had two set of tea towels I could now work with – perfect for the just in case mistakes, ya know?

Here is it right out of the package:

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I simply cut the fabric evenly down the middle and had two working pieces to hem into tea towels.

Next, I pressed the edges and hemmed them.

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I am by NO MEANS an seamstress, so I’ll spare you any sewing details, but here’s the gist.

You don’t have to be a pro at sewing.

It was simple straight lines on the sewing machine.

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My Great Grandmother’s handwriting looks beautiful on the linen!

And I was so happy using the pops of red as the background.

Turning recipes into tea towels was such a wonderful idea and I knew my mom was going to love this!

I folded and wrapped the towels with a pretty bow.

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Here are the two towels side by side.

And yes – I already folded and tied them up before taking pics, so just look past those creases, mkay?

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A perfect, sentimental gift to give to someone special, like my Momma!

Here is a close up of each towel.

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So how did the gift giving go?

Well, it wasn’t the fanfare, create a parade for Jen type of response, but she did tear up and gush and ooh and aah over her present.

She showed it to all her friends and our family and it made my heart happy to give her something she would cherish.

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Not only that, but she ending up ordering more of the fabric and sewed some herself to give to our cousins! So isn’t that the neatest?

So if you are looking for custom gift ideas that are easy, affordable and sure to be a win, turning recipes into tea towels is a perfect idea!

Pin this for later!

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Turning Recipes Into Tea Towels (2024)

FAQs

Why isn't the use of tea towels recommended? ›

Tea towels and cloth towels are very absorbent and provide an ideal, moisture rich environment for bacteria to grow and spread. Growth of bacteria creates a cross-contamination risk in the kitchen. A used tea towel can spread bacteria to your hands, to food contact surfaces and directly into food.

What is the best fabric to make tea towels? ›

There are two materials used in tea towels; cotton and linen. Many traditional tea towels are made from linen as they don't leave any lint whilst being used. This means that they do not produce fluff after constant use, dry quickly and absorb moisture instantly.

How do I transfer a handwritten recipe to a plate? ›

Cut out the paper copy and a similar size sheet of graphite paper. Layer the graphite paper behind the photocopy of the recipe, position the darkest side face down on the plate, and tape it into place.

How do you digitize handwritten recipes? ›

Download a mobile scanning app.

With a free scanner app like Adobe Scan, all you need to do is take a photo of your recipe and the app will scan it into a PDF right from your phone.

How can you avoid spreading bacteria through the use of tea towels? ›

Reduce the germs

In terms of tea towel hygiene, you should clean and thoroughly dry your kitchen towel at least once a day or after each use. The UK government recommends that tea towels should be sanitised by washing them in a washing machine with laundry detergent on a hot wash cycle of 90°C.

Do Japanese use tea towels? ›

Later on, once fabric manufacturing became more prevalent and Japan started growing cotton in the Edo period, the price of tenugui and other like items became more accessible and people embraced the tea towel's versatility - headbands for kendo martial arts, handkerchiefs for sweaty summers, a household cleaning aid, ...

Why are my tea towels not drying dishes? ›

If you use fabric softener and/or dryer sheets on your towels - you are causing the problem. Fabric softener and dryer sheets leave a “coating” on material, and with towels it will cause them to almost 'repel' water instead of absorbing.

What are tea towels called in America? ›

Kitchen towel can refer to: Dishtowel in North American English, called tea towel in UK English.

What is a substitute for a tea towel? ›

You can use a thin linen or cotton napkin instead of a tea towel for covering food or polishing silverware. Another option is a clean linen or cotton T-shirt, canvas, duck canvas, cotton or linen baby muslin, or broadcloth. Fine weave cheesecloth may work well, depending on what you need the tea towel for.

What is the difference between a tea towel and a flour sack towel? ›

Tea towels are known for being a fairly thin towel with the primary purpose of drying and polishing delicate things or as decoration for the kitchen. Whereas flour sack's are typically a thicker, sturdier material that's also more absorbent and versatile.

What can I do with old handwritten recipes? ›

You can upload your recipes to a computer a few ways. If you have a scanner you can simply scan the recipes into the computer. If you don't have access to a scanner, you can take pictures of your recipes using a digital camera or your smartphone.

How do you store handwritten recipes? ›

If you tend to save recipes from magazines as well as handwritten recipe cards, sort them into a three-ring binder. Use tab dividers and plastic page protectors for both full sheets (for pages from a magazine) and divided sheets (for 3-by-5-inch recipe cards).

Can you patent a recipe book? ›

Copyright law protects actual works of authorship such as a cookbook but not recipes themselves. A patent protects inventions that solve technical problems (ie. a new type of kitchen utensil), while trademarks protect a brand's identity (ie. Kelloggs, The Keg's logo, KFC recipes).

How do you save handwritten recipes? ›

A sizeable collection can be stored in standard archival file folders and boxes. Weak or damaged paper also can be placed in polyester sleeves and then in folders and boxes. Recipes also can be scanned and accessed electronically while the originals are kept in safe storage.

How to get handwriting onto fabric? ›

Slip a sheet of this Carbon Transfer Paper between the tracing paper and your fabric. Pressing hard, trace your writing (I'm using our tracing stylus here) to make an imprint on your fabric. The result? Your writing is right where you want it, all ready to embroider!

How do you transfer a handwritten recipe to a cutting board? ›

Apply a medium coat of decoupage glue to the front of the cutting board, then carefully position the recipe printed-side down. Once laid, you don't want to move it around, so be careful to find the positioning before pressing it into the glue.

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