All Free Crafts

Free Crafts, DIY Projects and Patterns to Make Homemade Gifts

  • Craft Projects
    • Angels
    • Bath and Body
    • Gifts in a Jar
      • The Bakery
      • Soups and Sides
      • Sweets and Treats
      • Pickles and Preserves
      • Decorative Jars and Bottles
    • Paper Crafts
      • Decorations
      • Paper Rolls
      • Paper Plate Crafts
      • Homemade Cards
    • Kid’s Crafts
    • Easy Homemade Gifts
      • Decoupage Crafts
      • Personal Homemade Gifts
      • Candle Making
      • Objets d’art
      • House Gifts
      • Silk and Faux Florals
  • Celebrations
    • Christmas Crafts
      • Santa Crafts
      • Snowman Crafts
      • Christmas Displays
      • Christmas Ornaments
      • Recycled Greeting Cards
    • Easter Crafts
      • Easter Baskets
      • Easter Bunnies
      • Easter Eggs
      • Easter Projects
    • Valentine Crafts
      • Hearts and Crafts
      • Valentines for Kids
      • Romantic Ideas and Projects
      • Homemade Valentine Treats
    • Halloween
      • Pumpkin Crafts
      • Ghosts and Ghouls
      • Witch Crafts
      • Halloween Recipes, Games, Activities
      • Homemade Costumes
    • Thanksgiving
    • Mother’s Day
    • Patriotic Crafts
    • St Patrick’s Day Crafts
  • Patterns
    • Crochet
      • Crocheted Clothing and Accessories
      • Afghans and Blankets
      • Bags, Purses, Wallets
      • Kitchen Crochet
      • Quick and Easy Crochet Patterns
      • Crocheted Toys
      • Vintage Crochet Patterns
      • Filet Crochet
      • Baby Crochet Patterns
    • Knitting
      • Knitting Patterns for Home
      • Knitted Winter Accessories
      • Easy Knitted Gifts
      • Vintage Knitting Patterns
    • Sewing
  • Recycling
    • Cardboard
    • Containers
    • Denim
    • Greeting Cards
    • Household Goods
    • Lightbulbs
    • Recycled Paper
  • Nature
    • Birding
    • Botanicals
    • Bugs and Insects
    • Pine Cone Crafts
    • Shells, Sticks and Stones
  • Gardening
    • Annuals
    • Perennials
    • Clay Pot Crafts
    • Fall
    • Garden Crafts and Projects
    • Herbs
    • Indoor Gardening
AllFreeCrafts » Recycling: » Household Goods » Dryer Lint

Dryer Lint

Sharing is Caring!
PinterestFacebookEmail

Last updated on June 19th, 2016 at 11:33 pm

dryer lint dust bunnyUses for Dryer Lint

by Jane Lake

After reading several group discussions about the different uses for dryer lint, I went hunting for dryer lint dust bunnies. As you can see from the photo, I found one!

With this much dryer lint accumulating, it was obviously time to find other ways to use it (and maybe other ways to use my time, but that’s another story).

You may be surprised at how very creative people can be with such a lowly common household substance that it is usually tossed out with the trash.

Dryer Lint Starts Fires

First, be careful, because dryer lint starts fires:

Dryer lint is highly flammable, which is why your dryer should always be vented to the outside, and you should remove lint from the lint trap regularly. Stick up a post-it note, if need be, to remind your busy teens to take this step. Decorate it with red hot flames to remind them they risk a house fire if they forget!

– Provide a coffee can, or other small container, for easy collection of dryer lint, preferably after every dryer use.

Second, start fires with dryer lint:

– Pack toilet paper rolls or paper towel rolls with dryer lint and use with kindling to easily start a fire in your wood stove or fireplace.

– Pack empty pill containers or film canisters with dryer lint. You’ll be surprised how much lint you can stuff in these (several dryer loads worth). Give them to the campers in your family to help start their next campfire.dryer lint art

– Make fancy cup cake campfire starters to give as gifts or sell as bazaar crafts. See the instructions for wood shaving campfire starters, replacing all or part of the wood shavings with dryer lint. Alternatively, pack cardboard egg cartons with dryer lint and drizzle with melted wax from broken crayons or old candles. Cut the sections apart and use as kindling for your next camp fire.

– Forget the lighter fluid, and use small amounts of dryer lint to light your next charcoal barbeque.

Dryer Lint as Art

Yep, I’m serious. Or semi-serious, anyway. Or maybe tongue-in-cheek serious. You can make the dust bunny shown in our photo by rolling copious amounts of dryer lint into a bunny shape and adding some goggle eyes. Slide it under your teenager’s bed as an artistic counterpoint to the dust bunnies already residing there. It just may work better than any amount of nagging to get the mess cleared out (if you try this, please let me know how it works out for you)! Caution: Don’t forget that dryer lint – even as a dust bunny – is highly flammable, so use it to play a joke or have a laugh but, once the fun is over, don’t leave it lying around. Recycle it in one of the ways suggested here, or dispose of it safely.lint

– Artistic types might like to see How to Make Dryer Lint Art on the Homes and Garden Television site.

– Serious artistic types should read the artist’s statement (and see the pictures) on Angels and Other Creatures, brought to you by the National Lint Project and Studio Capezzuti.

– Crafters with children who love to sculpt can make dryer lint clay. There are numerous recipes available on the web. The following recipe must be made by an adult, because it involves cooking in a saucepan. However, it is a nice clay to mold in a variety of ways.dryer lint angel

Dryer Lint Clay

Tear 3 cups of lint into small pieces and place in a saucepan. Cover with about 2 cups of water and slowly stir in 1 cup of flour. Add a few drops of vegetable oil and stir constantly, over low heat, until mixture is smooth and binds together. Pour onto sheets of newspaper, parchment or waxed paper to cool. Use to sculpt models, cover forms, or pack into small molds.

Allow your creation to dry fully, which can take anywhere from 3 to 7 days, depending on the size. Paint and decorate to finish.

Dryer Lint Faux Paper Mache

Combine 2 cups of water with 3 cups of dryer lint in a large saucepan. Stir in 2/3 cup of flour until well mixed. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until pulp holds together enough to form peaks. Pour onto newspaper, parchment or waxed paper to cool. If not using immediately, store in an airtight container; pulp will keep for about 3 days. Spread mixture over the object that you are using as the paper mache mold – a bowl, box, bottle or balloon, for instance. Allow to air dry, which may take up to a week. Sand rough edges and decorate as desired.

Dryer Lint Paper

– If you’re making handmade paper, add dryer lint to your paper pulp. Don’t try to make paper purely from dryer lint; it doesn’t have enough “body” to hold the paper together – but a handful of dryer lint in a blender full of paper pulp will add texture and interest to the final product.

Dryer Lint and Horticulture

– Line plant pots with dryer lint, then add potting soil and plants. The lint keeps the soil in, but lets the water out.

– Use dryer lint as a kind of indoor mulch to help conserve moisture for your indoor tropical plants. Just spread the dryer lint on the surface of the plant soil; water the plant as usual.

– Conserve moisture in outdoor container plants, or around the base of small speciman plants, by mulching with dryer lint.

Give Dryer Lint Away

Yep, there are those who would welcome your cast-off dryer lint. Among them are busy sparrows and robins, looking to line a nest for their expected family of baby birds. Please use only nature fiber lint from 100% cotton or wool fabrics.

– Fill an onion mesh bag with a mixture of nesting material, including small pieces of natural fibre dryer lint, small pieces of yarn or string (no bigger than the length of your thumb), hair from your hairbrush or dog hair, feathers or leftover strings of moss from your craft projects. Hang from a tree in the springtime, ready for pickup by your grateful feathered friends.

– Give natural fibre dryer lint to your pets – offer it as a nesting material for your pet finches, guinea pig, hamsters or mice.

– Give dryer lint to the worms! Add natural fibre dryer lint to your compost heap.

Dryer Lint Do-Nots:

Yep, do nots, not donuts. I’ve seen some really silly suggestions for using dryer lint. All kidding aside, dryer lint is very flammable. It catches fire very easily and burns very well — so DO NOT use dryer lint to stuff toys or crafts, puff out appliques, or make pillows. It is soft and fluffy, and compacts well, but dryer lint is not a substance that you want surrounding you in a quilt or on a sofa, nor do you want your grandkids hugging a teddy bear stuffed with one of the world’s best fire starters.

Sharing is Caring!
PinterestFacebookEmail

Related Posts:

  • dryer sheet flowers
    Dryer Sheet Flowers
  • dryer sheet butterfly
    Dryer Sheet Butterflies
  • dustmom
    Dust Busters
  • wine glass gel candle
    Wine Glass Gel Candles
  • halloween stamped t-shirt
    Bootiful T-Shirt
  • antiqued picture frame
    Antiqued Frame

By Jane Lake Filed Under: Household Goods

Comments

  1. danagpeleg1 says

    November 29, 2016 at 3:28 pm

    Thanks so much, Jane! throwing lint always seemed wasteful to me, now I know what I can do. Living in the woods, I think I may use it as a fire starter, and maybe dab in a little artistic project…

    Reply
  2. Mom Parker says

    June 18, 2016 at 11:53 pm

    Cute ideas! However, please don’t give dryer lint to birds! It is not good for their respiratory systems. Always a good idea to check with your county extension or Audobon society before giving household anything to wildlife.

    Reply
    • Jane Lake says

      June 20, 2016 at 12:02 am

      Quite a few Audubon organizations do recommend offering dryer lint as nest material. However, there are concerns about it stiffening or retaining water after getting wet. That’s why I suggest sticking only to natural fiber lint collected after drying cotton or wool clothing or blankets. I like your idea of checking with the local county extensions or other places for their best advice on this kind of question!

      Reply
  3. femalefitnessguru says

    April 14, 2016 at 6:55 pm

    Thank you, Jane, for sharing this great info about dryer lint, I knew it had to be a useful substance! The fire starters, paper mache’, and homemade paper ideas appeal to me most. Gotta get crafting with dryer lint! Who knew?! 🙂

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please explore ALL our FREE CRAFTS!

Recent Posts

  • How to Preserve Garden Herbs
  • Easy Willow or Vine Wreath DIY
  • Construction Paper Maple Leaf – DIY plus Video
  • How to Grow Cress Egg Heads
  • Happy Easter Bunny Signs
  • Bread Tag Weatherproof Bird House Roof

Basic Knitted Dish Cloth

Dishcloth – Basic Knitted Dishcloth Pattern

six hand knitted dishcloths is many colors

Free basic knitted dishcloth pattern, very easy to knit in cotton yarn.

...Free Home Knitting Patterns

Build the Right Bird House

How to Build the Right Bird House

build the right birdhouse

How to build the right bird house for the birds you want to attract, including dimensions, entrance hole sizes, check list of tips.

Homemade Hummingbird Food

Hummingbird Food Recipe and Care Tips

hummingbird food recipe and placement tips banner

Homemade hummingbird food; make an ant moat; storage, placement, cleaning and companion flowers.

How to Attract Orioles

Homemade Oriole Food

male Baltimore oriole on orange feeder

How to make homemade oriole food nectar from a sugar and water recipe, plus how to attract orioles with other foods and nesting materials.

More Birding...

Two Needle Knitted Mittens

free knitting patterns for two needle mittens

Free knitting pattern to make traditional two needle mittens for sizes child to adult.

More Free Winter Knitting Patterns...

Categories

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Copyright © 2025 ALLFREECRAFTS.COM