I finally took a stab at my mending pile, and was able to adequately repair several items of clothing, one of which required serious darning/re-weaving where a button's stitching had ripped right out.
One of the things I did a while ago, and then forgot about, was to overdye a skirt and shirt in the washer. The skirt had colors that were too bright, and the shirt was much too pale. The skirt came out very nicely, and the shirt came out in a dull but tolerable shade.
I did a quick experiment with cutting a milk jug into narrow strips and then crocheting them. Crochet uses up length very quickly, and it was difficult to cut very much of it because the scissors I was using tended to slide on the plastic.
Then I messed around with ironing the result, in between sheets of kitchen parchment paper. The plastic fused in some places and not in others.
I also tried ironing flat pieces of milk jug together to fuse them, again using parchment paper to protect the iron and working surface. This worked, but since the plastic shrinks a bit when heated, you can't butt two edges together and expect them to stay there. It also doesn't come out entirely flat.
At the playground, I found some stringy dead weeds that could probably be made into a rustic basket, if one reliably had their hands free for working.
I counted diapers going into the washer, and indeed as described in The Tightwad Gazette, twenty diapers equals one load of diaper laundry. Cloth wipes are included in that, and really it is twenty diaperings rather than diapers, because I am putting a newborn-size diaper inside a larger-baby diaper at each diaper change.
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