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Preparing Plastic Yarn
Choose the color, pattern and desired thickness/strength of your tote. Recycle plastic bags to make your yarn. Buy a roll of plastic bags the color you prefer. Use a thicker plastic material like shower curtains or plastic drop cloth.
Sort out all the bags you have collected into color, thickness, and material.
Cut the top handles of each bag and stack them evenly.
Fold the bags twice leaving one side edge seam sticking out.
Cut along the entire length of the unrolled bags. You will need to cut the bags into two or three sections depending on the thickness you desire.
Don't unfold the bags as you cut with your scissors.
Keep the width of the strips in a uniform size. Variations in thickness will make your tote pattern look bad and be weaker at some sections.
Leave three or four inches of the end of your roll uncut. To keep a continuous long yarn you must turn the plastic roll over and make your second strip cut from there on, skipping six inches and leaving the uncut end intact.
Fold as many times as you need to match the width of the strips.
Using a Multipurpose scissors or sharp blade cut along leaving the end uncut.
Turn over and cut the next strip to the other end.
Repeat until all the plastic sheet is evenly cut in a continuous plastic strip yarn.
Crocheting the Tote
Hook and loop your yarn with the Crochet Needle. Select a large diameter needle, larger than you would normally use on common yarn.
Crotchet chain stitch into the same loop to make a round or oval bottom of bag.
Keep casting on the round using only the chain stitch or the single crochet to avoid gaps in your pattern. You can alternate colors every circle turn you complete using a second plastic yarn.
Add extra stitches per turn until you reach the desired size of your tote's bottom.
Count the same number of stitches when you build up the sides.
Continue your on the round crochet pattern until you reach the desired height of your bag.
Cast a chain stitch to form the handles of your bag.
Make sure that you make the handles wide and strong enough to handle the load.
Run a wire or Nylon line to the handle to give it strength and support.
Use an Iron to weld and join thicker plastic strips to reinforce the side, edges, handles and bottom. Set the iron temperature under the polyester temperature setting. Use parchment paper to keep the iron from sticking to plastic.
Add a flat plastic bottom to keep small objects from falling.
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