It was not my intention to suggest using the milk jugs for human use. The original poster said she's working on dolls, and I suggested it for small projects like dolls. Perhaps my wording could have been better, but clearly it is too thin to use for boning for humans.

Natalie


On 11/17/2011 4:57 PM, lynlee o wrote:

  I have used the thicker lids of ice cream containers as inners for caps. It 
cuts well and you can actually put the odd stitch into it. It stood up to kids 
and has a nice firm maliability. Milk jugs here are now way too thin to be 
useful to me, and they break down into sharp bits quickly in the sun - I used 
then as garden cloches for vege plants.

Diane

Someone suggested to me once that cutting strips from a milk jug makes
wonderful boning for smaller projects, like dolls. I haven't had time to
test it myself, but it seems like a pretty good idea. You can always
double up on layers if you need it a bit stiffer too.

Natalie


________________________________
From: Danielle Nunn-Weinberg<gilshal...@comcast.net>
To: Historical Costume<h-cost...@indra.com>
Sent: Wednesday, November 16, 2011 3:01 AM
Subject: [h-cost] artificial whalebone

Greetings,

Has anyone had much luck cutting down the white plastic artificial whalebone, into 
much smaller pieces, say length-wise?  I've tried soaking it in boiling water first 
to try and soften it up, I tried using a brand new exacto knife, scissors, and all I 
got was a mess and sore hands.  I'm trying to create doll-sized (22") boning 
from the full sized piece since I can't seem to find anything that would make good 
doll boning in and of
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