Members Out in the World: June Kamerling’s Braided Rugs
My mom was an artist. Fabric was her medium. I grew up around fabric and her creations: doll clothes, my clothes, beautiful custom designed garments for women, spectacular creations. I learned to sew at an early age and developed a love for fabric and putting colors and shapes together. Throughout my life I sewed my own clothes, made quilts, fabric wall hangings—and then I had kids and it all stopped except for occasional mending.
Fast forward to 2020. About half-way through the pandemic year of staying home and mostly not working, I dragged out all of my fabric and wondered what I could do with it all. Something was brewing. I wanted to do something with all these great colors and patterns. The previous year I had bought a braided rug on line for my bedroom. Every time I looked at it I thought “I could do that; it looks easy. I’m going to try this.”
I checked out YouTube videos about making braided rugs—there are so many ways to do it. Ultimately I decided I would do it my way, whichever way that was, and I was about to find out. I tore some of my fabric into 3½- to 4-inch strips, tied the ends to a bedpost, and started braiding. I figured out how to overlap the strips with the next strip rather than stitching them together. (It's too much work to stitch). I learned as I braided: what works and doesn’t work, what fabrics work better than others, and how to keep the top smooth with no ragged ends. After I braided many feet of fabric I started hand sewing with a needle and embroidery thread.
The hardest part was getting started, but once I had a small circle going the rest followed easily but painstakingly slow. If I wanted a 3-foot rug, I learned that I needed about 100 feet of braid, so after sewing about 50 feet I went back and braided more. And so on and so on.
I’m now on my 5th rug. I’m excited about this one because I’m working with specific colors. I haven’t done that yet and can’t wait to see what the end product will be.
I give them all away. The joy for me is in the creating for a particular special person in my life. I get to “have” the rug while I’m making it, so I don’t need to keep it. I have photos. This is the first one I’m timing. So far about 15 hours and I still have another 50 feet to braid and 75 feet to sew. I’m guessing roughly 30 hours of work for one rug plus a lot of episodes of mindless shows. (I have to admit here that I’ve never watched The Golden Girls, so that has gotten me through the past rug or two.)
This work feeds my creative passion. It's meditative and relaxing. I figure I’ll keep making braided rugs for as long as the creative fire keeps burning and my hands hold out! I’m always happy to take fabric scraps that you’d like to get rid of.