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Feed sacks, who knew???

Lauren

Distinguished Service Award
Messages
5,060
Location
Sunny California
I also knew this. It was really popular, and still is, especially with quilters. You'll see vintage feed sacks catch quite a hefty price tag these days! The thing that's so great about the 30's feed sack quilting popularity is that there's a slew of repro cottons out there. I actually just picked one up a few weeks ago with little sailors waving flags. Gotta love feed sack prints. :D
 

just_me

Practically Family
Messages
723
Location
Florida
Feed sack keeping a little baby warm.

images.php
 

vitanola

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,254
Location
Gopher Prairie, MI
Several of the Southern cotton mills had art departments where special patterns were designed for their calico sackings back in the 1930's, 1940's and 1950's.

As I recall, the widespread use of dress calico for sacking came about in the 1930's, largely as a marketing measure.

The printed sackings were generally reserved for poultry feed. Remember that poultry raising was generally the purview of the distaff side of the family.

Some millers packed flour and meal in these colorful calicoes, but this practice never really caught on.
 

Bill Taylor

One of the Regulars
I remember from the 1930s our housekeeper and my mother making aprons and sun bonnets from brightly figured flour or feed sacks. We mostly called them flour sacks, although that wasn't the only thing that came in them. Because we we bought very few groceries other than 100 pound sacks of flour, sugar, cornmeal and chicken feed, which probably lasted about a week, there was always lots of flour sacks around. Coffee beans came in a towsack (rough burlap bag). Our cook would not allow store bought bread in the house-we had homemade bread for every meal (biscuits, cornbread, light bread or rolls, hush puppies or hoe cake which is basically the same thing as cornbread but fried rather than baked). We usually had about 10 acres in garden plus a large orchard, so other food was either fresh or it came from the cellar. Meat was from the chickens, or butchered beef and hogs kept and maintained in freezer locker company downtown on Main Street. Milk, butter, cheese, etc. came from the the cows and goats. That dieters delight of today called Cottage Cheese was called turkey feed and was made by pouring unseparated milk into a towsack hung over the clothes line and let to drip(curds and whey of Little Miss Muffet fame). Opps, got off topic. Sorry about that. I'll stop now.

Bill Taylor
 

Forgotten Man

One Too Many
Messages
1,944
Location
City Dump 32 E. River Sutton Place.
LizzieMaine said:
*Great* dress. And extra points for bearing in mind that a lady always wears white gloves when using her .38 in public. Powder marks are never fashionable.

lol So true! Must remember to be a lady even when doin' the dirty work lol

This is an interesting thread... feed sack dresses... they sure knew how to get along or get as much out of things back in those days!

I think we'll be getting more practice in this sooner then later.
 

BigSleep

One of the Regulars
Messages
295
Location
La Mesa CA
I have a blanket that my grandmother made in the 1920s or 30 that is actually made out of little tobacco sacks. They are about 7 inches in length by about 3 inches wide. There must be about a hundred of then sewn together to make up one side of this blanket.

An interesting glimpse into a time when nothing went to waste.
 

Idledame

Practically Family
Messages
897
Location
Lomita (little hill) California
I recall a story about a teenager who was invited to a fancy party. Her mother made the fanciest dress she could - out of feed sacks. The girl was thrilled with her new dress until she got to the party. She was mortified because she was the only one who was wearing a feed sack dress at the party and of course all the girls recognized the feed sack pattern and whispered and laughed at her. (Girls are so rotten aren't they?)
It was accepted as perfectly fine in poorer areas but she was trying to fit in with wealthier girls. Did I read it or was it an episode from Little House on the Prairie?

Another story I read involved a woman trying to collect enough feed sacks for a special dress but the feed company changed patterns so she couldn't get enough sacks of that one pattern to make the dress she wanted. The man at the feed store didn't keep track of who bought what, her friends were all collecting other patterns and she couldn't find anyone in her farming community who had the sacks she needed.
 

Lady Day

I'll Lock Up
Bartender
Messages
9,087
Location
Crummy town, USA
There are feed sacks still around!

I was in Smart and Final of all places (well, I guess it wouldnt be too out of sorts) and Im walking down one of the aisles, and there on a bottom shelf, next to all the other flour types in plastic sacks, rested a 30lb cotton sack with white with purple flowers! The maker was Mexican, and there were about 5 sacks total, three different designs (one white with blue flowers, the other white with pink flowers).

I thought it was the coolest thing!
When I go back Ill take a pic.

LD
 

Inusuit

A-List Customer
Messages
356
Location
Wyoming
Similar blanket...

BigSleep said:
I have a blanket that my grandmother made in the 1920s or 30 that is actually made out of little tobacco sacks. They are about 7 inches in length by about 3 inches wide. There must be about a hundred of then sewn together to make up one side of this blanket.

An interesting glimpse into a time when nothing went to waste.

I saw a similar blanket that had been made in the 1960's by an inmate in the old maximum security prison in Rawlins, Wyoming. Lots of Bull Durham bags when into that blanket.
 

Mid-fogey

Practically Family
Messages
720
Location
The Virginia Peninsula
My Dad...

...went to college with boxer shorts made of flour sacks. They used to be a very fine weave to keep the flour in and were much used after empty. My grandmother made the shorts and made herself dresses out of feed bags.
 

raiderrescuer

One of the Regulars
Messages
209
Location
Salem Oregon
I remember as a child going over to my Grandmother's house in the late 60's and early 70's and all of her Kitchen Linens from Dish Towels to Pot Holders were Flour Sacks.
My Mother picked up the habit too, she would use Flour Sack Towels exclusively when she was making homemade bread to cover the dough as it rose as well as always keeping one hung up one the oven door.
 

Warden

One Too Many
Messages
1,336
Location
UK
The two feed sack skirts we own, have been lent to the Cowper and Newton Musuem for their temporary WW2 War on Waste exhibition.

So if you in sunny North Bukcinghamshire (UK) do pop along and see them

Harry
 

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