I know its not quite that simple, I’d have to make thread first, and after I get enough, make clothing out of it. Could this actually be done? I can sew, but never made my own clothing nor have I ever made thread, so I don’t know if it could actually be done or not. I’m 100% sure the time and effort would not be worth it, or money spent on stuff to produce the thread, etc. But looking at my lint garbage pale made me wonder.
You can’t spin thread from it since the fibers are too short.
But you can use lint for felting.
As someone who spins and felts, the fibers in lint are too short for felting too. Both spinning and felting require the fibers be long enough to tangle and lint is the broken pieces of fibers that have fallen out of threads already. You can get it to stick together like felt but it won’t ever be sturdy like a felt because the fibers can’t get wrapped around one another or tangled up. Like trying to give dreadlocks to a guy with a buzz cut.
Some people use dryer felt to add color to felted things they have made but I think of lint like the crumbs at the bottom of the cereal box or chip bag.
How does felting work?
Ive seen thread spun from it before
One use for lint is as a fire starter.
You can just use it as is and light it and it works great.
Or you can soak the lint with Vaseline, then store a small bunch of it into a sandwich Ziploc bag and keep it for emergencies or camping.
Because it’s so good as a fire starter … always check your dryer for excessive accumulation.
Also blow out the duct. So many people don’t even know that’s a thing that needs done. Took me a decade until I learned that, and it was so clogged.
It does work good, but always good to be aware of how much of your clothes are synthetic fibers. Burning that is like burning plastic. Not good for BBQing.
Shout-out to the GM of the Aaron’s calling me an idiot that doesn’t know how to operate a dryer when they sold me one out the door so clogged I’m amazed my house didn’t light on fire. Swore up and down they quality checked everything, the 2 hours I spent with that machine open scraping the lint out suggests otherwise.
Yes, I’m still salty about it over a year later.
Started 3 fires in the last week with lint. Great stuff if your kindling is dry. For wet stuff I use homemade napalm (old unleaded + styrofoam).
There are some really good flint and steel survival rods available now. Not the flimsy Scouting ones of yesteryear, but ones with anodized aluminum housings, hardened metal strikers and large diameter flint rods.
Started our winter stove with it the other day and am really happy with it.
🎶 Goodness gracious, lint starts a fire 🎶
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Lint is made of very short fibers. Yarn is held together by friction and tangling between the fibers; if they’re too short, it won’t hold together. So if you tried to spin lint into a yarn, it would probably just break apart.
Lint makes a great firestarter
I’m the firestarter. Lint ball firestarter.
Ooweeooweeoowee
The fibers are too short, but you could probably make a neat paper out of it.
I remember reading about someone who tried that once. He wasn’t able to spin thread from the lint.
If I remember correctly, the fibers were too short and frayed to form into threads.
I use mine as firestarter at barbecues- ot did, back when summer still had rain in my area (the only time of year when it gets nice enough to bbq), now there’s a yearly burn ban that spans the entire season
Does burn ban apply to BBQ? I always assumed that’s enclosed fire.
In WA it did this year
Dryer lint is basically microplastic if you have synthetic fibres
Doesn’t answer your question directly but those short lint fibers can be pushed into a toilet paper roll and made into firestarters that work at the campsite
Kind of related but would it make for good insulation in a jacket?
Well you got me curious:
https://www.quora.com/Is-it-possible-to-make-clothes-out-of-dryer-lint
you would need a magic spider, and those only start to show up once you’ve consumed enough meth… although if you’re thinking of making clothes from dryer lint, it sounds like you’ve made a good start on that…