How to Make Hand-Warming Gloves
comments (30) January 13th, 2011With the three sides sewn, use a fabric-marking pen and ruler to divide the rectangle into three sections. Here's my geeky trick for that: Place your ruler across the rectangle at an angle, moving it until you have a measurement that's easy to divide by three. Make a mark at each third, as shown.
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Draw lines with washable fabric marker. |
Draw a line to mark each third. Then, hand-sew or machine-sew along these two lines. (For hand-sewing, I use a tiny running stitch.) Knot the thread securely at the end of each seam.
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Use a funnel to fill the first section with rice. |
Time to fill this little pillow with something that will hold warmth. I'm using rice here, but you can also use flaxseeds or buckwheat groats. Check your local health-food store or the bulk section of a grocery store for these.
Starting at the end you left open, push a funnel into the first section of the pillow. (You may have to stretch the felt a little, and this is okay.) Gently place a pinch of rice into the funnel. Move the funnel up and down as needed to help the rice fill the section, and keep adding rice until you reach the top.
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Hand-sew the end closed over the rice. |
From here, I recommend hand-sewing. Sew the first section closed with a tiny whipstitch. Don't knot the thread yet, and leave it attached to the pillow.
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Fill and close the remaining two sections. |
Move on to the center section. Fill it with rice and sew it closed. Then, do the same with the last section.
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Position the finished pillow on the palm of the glove. |
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Comments (30)
Posted: 11:23 am on January 18th
Posted: 1:59 pm on February 25th
Posted: 8:13 am on January 27th
Simply great.
http://www.datadoctor.biz
Posted: 2:42 am on August 13th
Posted: 9:37 am on February 17th
Posted: 1:46 pm on December 17th
Posted: 9:25 am on December 17th
Posted: 11:08 pm on December 16th
i've been thinking about this in general - does it matter if the rice is organic? if it isn't are we releasing something chemical when we heat it up? i have one for the back of my neck and my lower back, it sure makes going to sleep a lot easier on a cold night
Posted: 8:33 pm on December 16th
Posted: 7:13 pm on December 16th
Posted: 7:10 pm on December 16th
Posted: 10:15 am on January 28th
If you don't have to have fingers free, as with driving, you can also use this idea with mittens, which are generally warmer than gloves. And, since the ends of fingers get cold first, you can put make the pillow long enough to go all the way to your finger tips, or perhaps only put it in the fingertips if you want more flexibility. Otherwise, put a seam where your fingers meet your palm to allow for bending. If you really want to be warm in bitter cold, put a pillow in the thumb portion as well. I learned this when I went snowmobiling through Yellowstone part one January. I didn't have pillows or microwaves, but I had those disposable warmth packs for my mittens and boots, and they made all the difference, except my thumbs were cold when I wasn't riding on a snow machine with thumb warmers.
I would think this would be good to use to send kids off to school if they walk in the winter. They could potentially sit on the pillows/gloves at the end of the day to warm them at least to body temperature before putting them on to leave.
Please note that the rice pillow will get wet unless you have waterproof gloves or mittens if you use it for snowball fights, snowperson-making or things that make you sweat, such as shoveling snow or cross country skiing in milder winter weather. Many snow mittens are waterproof and are roomy enough to accommodate such a heated rice pillow.
Posted: 8:39 pm on January 25th
I am going to make them for everyone!
Posted: 4:10 pm on January 24th
Posted: 1:38 pm on January 21st
Posted: 8:07 pm on January 15th
*clapping* Another triumphant tutorial, Sister D!
Posted: 9:25 pm on January 9th
Posted: 1:53 pm on January 7th
Posted: 9:21 am on January 6th
How long do they stay warm? We've bought little handwarmers, that don't have to be cooked, but they set off the store alarms! Must be what they're made of. Anyway, your pouch would be enough to hold them, before you add the rice.
For the people with Reynaud's Syndrome, nothing beats keeping those hands warm. Thanks.
Posted: 9:51 am on January 5th
Posted: 11:48 am on January 4th
Posted: 1:05 am on January 4th
CHANGES:
(1) Made them oval, so they fit into the cup of the palm better.
(2) Used flannel and did not attach to gloves. Flannel had enough nap to hold their place in the gloves when I inserted them (while wearing the gloves). FYI, our gloves had a fleece lining. If the pads had shifted around, I would made another set adding a dot of velcro "teeth" to the flannel before starting to stich in order to insure the pad would cling to the glove.
(3) Made entirely on machine. Used a zigzag on outside edge. When stuffing, I made the channels quite full/fat, but stoped filling about 3/4 inch from top--that gave me enough sewing space to fit the machine foot. when sewn shut, rice could shift into empty space at top, thus "thinning" the pad, so it wasn't TOO fat.
Posted: 10:37 pm on January 3rd
KC4 - great idea to add aromatherapy!
Posted: 6:40 pm on January 3rd
How about inserts the snap or velcro in?
Posted: 11:50 am on January 3rd
Posted: 11:29 am on January 3rd
Posted: 10:56 am on January 3rd
Posted: 11:24 pm on January 2nd
Posted: 9:28 pm on January 2nd
Posted: 1:33 pm on January 2nd