Monday, December 3, 2007

Save Those Socks


Recycling your socks


Ah, this is terrific, especially since we just went through our clothes' drawers and found tons of unmatched socks. We sometimes try to fool ourselves into believing that if we keep them long enough, the missing sock will turn up but it never does. So try these ideas.


Make a dust rag. Slip the sock on your hand. Dampen it with water or a furniture polish and clean away! Socks are good for furniture, window sills, computer screens, floor spills, handles, and blinds.
Polish your shoes. Old socks make great shoe polishers. You can also use them to shine the shoe after polishing.
Make a homemade hacky sack. A hacky sack is a small cloth ball filled with small beads or beans. Cut off about half the top part of a long sock and about three quarters for a short sock. Fill the sock with dried rice, dried peas, or beads. Sew the opening together in a ball shape.
Make a drink cozy. This requires a long sock. Cut the whole top of the sock off. Slide it over a bottle to keep the bottle cool (insulated). A shorter sock can be used for cups and cans.
Make a coin purse. You'll need an anklet-sized sock for this project. Use the whole sock and decorate this sock bag with sequins, beads, glitter, or any other decorative items you have about the house. Sew a strip of fabric onto the top for a handle, or a zipper across the opening.
Make sock dolls. You can also make a sock monkey or a sock puppet. Fill the sock with beans or rice. Glue, sew, or draw on eyes, nose, and mouth. Cut up another old sock into strips and sew on for hair.
Keep a pet's paws warm. If you have an ailing animal that is suffering from the cold, old socks can be helpful in keeping their paws warm. If you are a wildlife rehabilitator, another great use for socks is as temporary pouches for baby animals in your temporary care, such as baby joeys, bats, or possums. Any creature that likes a springy and soft warm place to snuggle into will appreciate this and you will be able to hang the sock up if it is a strong old woolen type, to mimic mother animal's pouch.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Bravo on the hand-dusters and the shoe-polishers, we've been doing that already! As for the tip on warming baby wild animals, well, we rehabilitators love having socks for just that reason (a young college student once brought us a perfectly warmed baby squirrel, all 40 grams of him, in a WOOL SOCK, and he wasn't a bit chilled). I think you can also fill a sock with rice and zap it in the microwave to make an impromptu heading pad for critters!!