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HOUSE-LINEN.

      57. Of course, the HOUSE and BODY LINEN is regularly mended every week, but every housewife knows that there are times when linen should undergo a more "thorough repair"-ing than it receives weekly. The linen list should be examined, the linen counted, the list corrected, and any new linen carefully made and marked. Sheets should be turned sides and middle and re-hemmed, or rather re-sewn, for the hems of all house-linen should be sewn, not hemmed. Old tablecloths may be cut up into tray or lunch cloths, old finger-napkins be darned and fringed into d'oyleys for vegetables or for placing under pie-dishes.

      58. Faded CHINTZ HANGINGS make excellent dusters, neatly hemmed round, and very pretty fringed d'oyleys may be made out of small squares of holland, either bleached or unbleached. New tablecloths or dinner-napkins may be marked in satin stitch embroidery in white or in ingrain colours. Do not forget to re-mark any linen that has had the hems cut off and the marks turned in.

      59. For MARKING with ink, use a quill pen and Bond's marking-ink. The writing should be neat, and the word ironed as soon as written. For ironing after marking, a small board about a foot square should be used, and kept for the purpose. It should be covered with a thick flannel, nailed on, and with a clean linen cover tacked on. The iron-rest must never be placed on the table, in case of the heat drawing the polish into blisters. To ascertain if an iron is hot, scatter a drop of water on it; the water should fizz and roll off in haste to escape. Always try the iron on a coarse cloth first before placing it over the name, and do not keep it on more than a second if the iron is hot, as it should be. Never mark clothes or linen when it is returned from the wash, unless perfectly dry,  which is not often the case. The ink runs on a damp surface, and an untidy mark appears in place of a neatly-written name.

      60. As the HOUSE-LINEN requires inspection and mending, so the body-linen of the household should undergo revision during leisurely winter days, and every article should be re-taped, re-buttoned, darned, and mended. New sets of clothes should be cut out and made. It is best, in cutting out, to tear the skirts of chemises off from the piece, and use the remainder for the smaller parts, as sleeves, gores, bands, &c.. Gores are usually cut from the upper part and added to the lower. In making under-clothing, whether by hand or by machine, care and exactness of detail should prevail. The machine-worker should take her place at the window, with the machine well cleaned, oiled, and worked for a few seconds without being threaded up. The seams should be prepared and handed to her. Let us take six chemises for an example. The gores must first be stitched, then felled, so the twelve gores must be handed to her lightly tacked in position. While she is stitching these, the fells must be turned down and tacked; she then fells these; while felling, the finished gores are being tacked in their proper places, and the chemise length closed on each side; the twelve sides and the other side of the gore are then stitched and felled in due succession. The sleeves follow in the same order, and the band, if plain; if made with much tucking and stitching, much adornment with insertion, it is best to complete the bands before beginning the skirts; get sufficient tucking done in strips from three to five tucks in a strip; arrange and baste them with the embroidery or lace at night, as the work is light and easy, and can be taken up or left at will. Then the stitching can be completed altogether. The difficulties met with by some ladies in working their sewing-machines are, we regret to say, very much their own fault; of course, we do not mean to say that if a lady buys a common imitation of a good machine at about a quarter of the real cost, she must not expect to have some trouble with her "bargain"; but a lady possessing a Wilcox and Gibbs, a Wheeler and Wilson, a Silencieuse, or a Little Wanzer, should not have anything but praise to give her iron seamstress. But no machine will work though without oil, and they all require clean and kind treatment, to be kept under cover, to be well oiled and wiped with a soft cloth, to have the needle set properly, the stitch and tension in unison, and the cotton or silk suitable to both the needle and the fabric. In working upon dressed longcloth, it is well to soap the seams, as one would do in hand-sewing, to avoid breaking our hand-sewing needles, but the easiest mode is to ask the housemaid to wash out the longcloth, when torn into lengths, with plenty of soap and water, and to iron it out smoothly for cutting out; this will give a very pleasant softness to the work, and allow its being stretched very nicely. In working in thin sleezy  fabrics, some machines draw the work in with the teeth of the feed-box; this issue remedied by placing strips of paper below the work and atitching through all; the paper tears away very easily afterwards. Another fault common to machine-workers is the over-quick pace at which they drive the machine, a pace at which they can scarcely guide the work or see the stitches. It is the nature of women when riding and driving to go very fast; and so we drive on our machines, and are surprised that we cannot keep our stitching as even as we should like to see it. To cure this rapid driving we must practice working the machine slowly; braiding is good practice for this, and teaches one to manage a machine better than any other kind of work.

      61. HAND-MACHINES are exceedingly convenient when really good, as the Little Wanzer, &c. The work can be done easily and far more quickly than by hand, and it is very pleasant to sit at the table at work as in hand-sewing.

      62. Attention to HOUSE-LINEN should comprise the careful inspection and repair of the muslin curtains, which should be "roughed" in October. These should be darned, and lace sewn on where accidentally removed. Long curtains half worn-out will make capital short muslin blinds; be sure to choose small designs in buying your curtains, if you destine them to this use in the future. Make wide hems if you wish brass rods to pass through them for window screens, and use patent Valenciennes lace for trimming them; it washes admirably and wears well. Stair-covers and holland druggets, too, must be mended by prudent housewives.




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