Liners all icky even after washing them so carefully?
Welcome to the club. I bought my very first pair over a year ago and fell in love! So soft and comfortable, perfect for running out the door to take the kiddos to school, no socks needed :) Then after the second wash the liners turned all smashed and icky even after being so careful. So after a few months I decided to try and make a pattern to make my very own liners. Not to hard, at least for me to follow. I'm sure all of you know what I mean, you take time to make a template and pictures along with instructions but even though you know what to do trying to explain and outline it for someone else is harder! If you try my pattern out, please let me know how it went, and if there may be any changes that will help.
I have scanned the templates I came up with but I made only one size, M7 / W9. I would recommend printing out the bottom foot template first and scale down before printing until you come up with the correct percentage, ie 100%, 97%, 92% etc... Your foot will fit perfectly inside the #5 just as if you drew a line right around it :) Once this happens you have the perfect % to print all the pieces! As for the templates, once printed take the #5 (bottom foot) template and cross out the #5 and flip over and mark a new #5 (this will make everything easier! I made a goof but caught it before I wrote this)
This is my very first time making a template so if you have an easier, better way I am all ears!
Supplies:
1/4 to 1/2 yd of your desired fabric (thickest fleece, lambswool (awesome!), if its a thinner fabric you will need to double up on fabric!)
3/4" or 1" elastic OR a stetchy thin rubber stablizer
thread
Instructions:
You will then sew piece #1 & #2 ends together.
Keeping RS facing sew each side edge to make a circle.
Now you will take #3 and sew the top two edges together, once done you will then flatten and sew the top arch, RS together
You will then sew the RS sides of #3 & #4 together making a circle once again :)
You will then place the #1/#2 piece combo inside of the #3/#4 piece combo, RS facing each other. Making sure that the piece with #2 matches up with #3, so that the edge already sewn on #2 is down and you are sewing the other edge. Confused yet? I am :)
This pattern is for fun and a way to spice up your CROCS. If you make these and sell them, good for you :) just PLEASE give me the credit for the pattern. I made this pattern free so everyone can use and enjoy it, so please don't steal my idea and hard work, PLEASE!
* I do not work for CROCS, nor do I say these are authorized by CROCS.*