Thursday, January 19, 2017

Breaking in Jeans with a Tri-Acid Wash

I received a pair of LL Bean Double L jeans for Christmas.  It's my first pair from Bean and they are a nice heavyweight material good for daily wear.  A negative to the heavy denim is that it was rather stiff.  I turned to the internet to search for ways to soften them up quickly.  There are plenty of articles on how to break in a pair of jeans.
I settled on a vinegar soak and wash followed by extended drying with tennis balls.  Of course this was too simple.  I didn't want to go the extra step to beat them with a bat or run them over with a car in the filthy New England winter.  So what could I do?
If the main acting agent in vinegar was acid, wouldn't more acid be better?  Well its worth a shot, instead of one acid I decided to use three.  Vinegar = acetic acid, Barkeepers Friend = oxalic acid, and pure citric acid.
A soak, acid wash, regular wash, and two dry cycles produced softer jeans with little to no fading on the dark wash jeans.  I did the process with the jeans inside out and the inside surfaces seemed to be softer than the outside indicating that the beating in the dryer had a bigger effect on the exposed surface.  I think repeating the dry cycles with the jeans normal side out would make the outside softer as well, and I might take the extra step next time I have some time.
Another good thing about the LL Bean Jeans is that they are affordable and it emboldened me to take a chance on the multiple acids.


Materials:




Process:
  1. Soak the jeans in warm to hot water mixed with a half gallon of vinegar that just covers the jeans.
  2. Dump the jeans and solution into the washer (most washing machines will drain prior to starting anyway)
  3. Fill the pre-wash, main wash, and fabric softener dispensers with vinegar.
  4. Add the Bar Keepers Friend and Lemishine. I put them on the bottom of the washer not touching the jeans.
  5. Run the longest pre-soad/wash combination cycle that you have with warm water.
  6. Add small amount of detergent to main wash, vinegar to fabric softener dispenser and run another wash cycle.
  7. Put the jeans in the dryer with tennis balls (I used 4), dryer balls (I used 3), and aluminum foil balls (I used 2). You probably don't need the variety of balls, the point is to put a bunch in there. A half dozen of one kind or assorted should do it.  I just happened to have them all on hand. Note that the drying is going to be loud with all those balls in there.
  8. Run dryer on low heat for longest cycle (mine was 1:50)
  9. Repeat drying cycle 1 or more times as fits your schedule, on the second and subsequent you can switch to just air tumble (I ran them twice for a total of 3 hours and 40 minutes)
  10. Enjoy your now softer jeans.
Bonus: All that acid does a great job of cleaning your washer, especially when you have a front loader.


Keeping Wooden Train Track in Place - 1 Year Follow Up

Just a quick note updating the command strip + wooden track project.

1 year later and everything still in place.  No movement of any piece.  Amazingly the kids haven't even pulled any of the taps out.

I highly recommend this method to hold a wooden train track in place.

I'm planning on building an inclined drag race table for an upcoming birthday party soon and plan on using this method again.

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Mellisa and Doug Wooden Box Lids

The kids received several Melissa and Doug stamp kits as gifts over the holidays.
Each kit came in a small wooden box with dividers.
They are great for storage as long as you keep them upright. The problem is that they are open top boxes and come shrink wrapped in plastic, missing a key feature... a lid.
This drove me nuts so I decided to remedy the situation.
The result was a see through plastic lid secure enough to invert the kit without losing everything, yet still simple enough for a 2 year old to open.
All it took was about $5 in materials and 10 min of time.





Tools:
Steps:

  1.  Put the wood box on the panel and mark off the two sides to cut.
  2. Clamp the guide to the panel (or tape it)
  3. Score the line against the guide with the plastic cutter, repeat 10 times
     (a flat head screwdriver or any sharp pointed object that will scratch plastic will work)
  4. Put the plastic on the edge of a table and snap off the edge
  5. Repeat for the second edge
  6. If you don't get a clean break you can use the pliers to snap off any jagged edges
  7. Remove any sharp edges with sandpaper, a file, or by rubbing against a rough hard surface like concrete or brick
  8. Affix a section of magnetic tape to the box. (my tape was too wide so I cut it in half lengthwise)
  9. Cut a matching size piece and stick it to the one on the box. This is important to make sure that the pieces are in the correct orientation to attract and not oppose.
  10. Repeat on all four sides
  11. Remove the adhesive backs to the top magnets
  12. Align and place down the plastic panel on top of the magnets
  13. Use the sharpie to make a dot on one corner of the box and also matching on the plastic cover. This will make sure you put it back on in the correct orientation and will have no issues with the magnet orientation causing them to oppose and not secure.