What Is a Tea Towel?
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What is a Tea Towel?
The History of the Tea Towel
Repurposing Flour Sacks Into Tea Towels
Modern Tea Towels
If your house is anything like mine, you probably have a host of tea towels lying around: One by the kitchen sink, another hanging in the powder room, and five more tucked away in a drawer, ready to rotate when the others need washing.
But what actually makes a tea towel a tea towel, and why are they called tea towels in the first place? Here's everything you need to know about this kitchen textile.
What is a Tea Towel?
The main difference comes down to the material. Unlike your run-of-the-mill, super-absorbent bath or hand towels, tea towels are generally flat-woven from linen or cotton. Instead of using a higher-pile material like terry cloth, a tea towel does not leave lint or streaks behind.
The History of the Tea Towel
While tea towels are nearly ubiquitous these days, the tea towel's beginnings were far from humble. It's thought that they first became popular in 18th century England when textiles became more easily accessible. Often made from soft linen, tea towels were a favorite accessory amongst the upper echelons of English society. The ladies of the house used them during tea service and for drying cherished china. (This was apparently one of the jobs they didn't pass off to servants, as they didn't want to risk any broken saucers. The horror!)
The linen tea towels were also a way for women to show off their decorative stitching skills, as they would embroider them to coordinate with the rest of their table linens.
With the arrival of the Industrial Revolution and mass production in the 19th century, tea towels, like many things, became more widely available across the pond too. They could be made easily from cotton, which also democratized the dish-drying tool. Soon, tea towels moved from a flashy sign of luxury and wealth to a regular workhorse.
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Repurposing Flour Sacks Into Tea Towels
Tea towels moved further into the American household vernacular with the arrival of the Great Depression, as quick-thinking homemakers would recycle flour sacks to embroider and use as tea towels. Flour companies wised up and started packaging their flour in patterned sacks. The rest, as they say, is history.
Modern Tea Towels
Now, of course, you don't have to get through a bag of White Lily to snag a new tea towel—you can find them just about anywhere, from airport souvenir shops to your neighborhood grocery.
Yes, we've determined that tea towels are a tried and true workhorse, but you can also turn them into family heirlooms with help from a treasured hand-me-down recipe. Craft and print-on-demand websites have made it simple to use handwritten recipes or digitally written recipes to silk screen or print onto tea towels. This unique gift is a perfect way to give someone a practical yet extremely thoughtful gift.