I am taking a chance and posting this before Christmas, hoping that my nieces are not reading! This is all about Gram’s hangers. Now, I know my Gram wasn’t the only person out there making these, but she was the only person out there making them for me when I was younger… hence, Gram’s hangars.
When I got a bit older (I’m guessing 10 or 12 years old), she taught me how to make them. I searched all of our closets looking for one of Grams hanger. Do you think I found one? NO! I just wanted to look at it and work out how I was going to make them. Do you think I remembered how to do them? Yes, and no! I worked it out rather quickly, but I knew mine are a bit different. In fact, when I took the hangars I finished to MN this past fall to wrap them up and stash them away for my nieces, my mom came in to see what I was doing and then started pulling hanger after hanger out of her closest. All Gram’s hangars! She has all of them! I couldn’t help but laugh.
What I love about using these hangars is that my clothes don’t slip off the hangar (and I made them by recycling old wire hangars and gave them a new purpose in life)
You start with two metal dry cleaner hangers that are of equal shape and size. Tape them together in a few spots so you are fighting to keep the hangars together as you are working your yarn around them. You need two balls of yarn. They can be the same color or different colors, that is completely up to you, but the yarn does need to be in balls (not skeins). I could not remember how much yarn it took to make a hanger, so I bought two skeins of blue (for one niece) and two skeins of pink( for the other niece) and started wrapping them into balls. Make your yarn balls a manageable size so you can handle it easily enough and not be fighting with it to get it through the triangle form of the hanger at each pass. I made two hangers for each niece and have TONS of yarn left over. I could probably make them two more hangers each year for several years and still not run out (and hope they still like the colors I have!)
I started at the bottom of the neck where the hanger branches out and the worked my way around the hanger ending up back at the neck and then worked my way up to the top of the hook and back down to the neck. I know working my yarn over the hook and back gave it a bit of extra bulk, but I didn’t want to end at the top of the hook and have loos ends and knots up there where it gets most of its wear as it is put on your clothes rod and taken off over and over.
Tie both balls of yarn onto the bottom of the neck of the hangers leaving about a 6″ tail to work with later. You want to keep one ball of yarn on one side of you and the other ball of yarn on the other side of you. I hold the hangar between my legs so that my hands are free to work with the yarn balls. I will mention that the chair that I sit on in our living room is an old swan neck rocker. It has open arm rests which isn’t the best situation because there isn’t much room on either side of my body to rest the yarn balls without them falling through the arms rest, off the chair, and unrolling out on the floor.
To make a “stitch” make a loop with your yarn and then pass your ball of yarn over the hangar and through the loop. Now pull it tight. The tighter you pull the more loops you will need to make to cover your hangar. The loosen your “stitches” the lass yarn. I made mine rather tight. From time to time you can also push your “stitches” so they are tighter together also. There are no rules here, do what ever you are comfortable with.
You can do one “stitch” with each color yarn or more. I did one hangar with single “stitches” and the other with two “stitches” with each ball of yarn before working the other side.
I finished by knotting my ends together and leaving about a 6″ tail on each end. I added pom poms that I made out of the same yarn and used the tail ends to attach them to the hangers.
Crossing my fingers that my nieces will love them.
Have you ever made yarn hangers?
Sincerely, Emily
You can see what else I am up to over at Sincerely, Emily. The topics are varied, as I jump around from gardening to sewing to making bread or lotion and many things in between.
My Nana used to crochet yarn hangers and they were the BEST! They keep your clothes from falling and keep lumps out of the shoulders. She used wooden hangers, which are really hard to find now (not to mention relatively expensive), and I LOVE the idea of using 2 metal dry cleaner hangers taped together.
How did you get the yarn to stay on at the tip of the hook part? Did you hot glue the yarn to the hanger? Thanks!
Hi Stella Marie, thanks for stopping by. I worked the yarn up close to the tip of the hook, but not all the way. I thought about doing a number of things at the tip, but never did. I thought about a drop of glue (which I think would be a good idea) and I thought about gluing a bead on the tip too, a bead that would slip over the end of the hook (maybe a pony bead) but couldn’t lay my hands on the ones that I thought I had. I pulled each “stitch” rather tight and worked my way back done the hook again. Over the months I will have to get some feedback from my nieces to see how they are holding up.
Gram did crochet some of those wood hangars too. The next time I visit my parents I will have to get some photos of those and try to work some up.
That’s a great tutorial and something that I am going to be using myself because I am SICK TO DEATH of all of our clothes ending up on the floor! Cheers for a happy clothes free floor New Year 😉
Hi Fran – you are going to have fun making your yarn hangers I think.
These look so sweet, and look like something a grandmother would work on and give away. I love that the clothes don’t fall off, I am going to make these!
Thanks Sandra! I hope you have fun making them. I checked out your artwork – absolutely beautiful!