Portable Ironing Board Tutorial

Take your ironing anywhere!

Posted by Becky

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Make a custom sized ironing board so you can take it to sewing classes or do projects in any room in the house. Simple to make with a few supplies.

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You Will Need (4 things)

  • Wood board
  • Quilt Batting
  • Cotton Duck Canvas
  • Staple Gun

Steps (7 steps, 120 minutes)

  1. 1

    Materials needed:

    wood board 1/2 inch – 3/4 inch thick {not to thick or it will be heavy}
    batting
    muslin, duckcloth or canvas
    staple gun or hammer and tacks

    Find a piece of scrap wood. You might want to hit a lumber store and get yourself one.

    You definitly want something that is not treated, but it doesn’t have to be perfectly smooth- you will be covering it.

  2. 2

    Cut it to the size you would like. Mine is cut 36″ X 36″ I wanted it to fit in the crossbars of my quilting machine. I use it every time I sew.

  3. 3

    Wrap your batting. Taking the measurement of the board cut the same size out of your batting. If you would like you can wrap the sides a bit to help cushion those edges. You need this batting to be just a bit thick, so if it is thin– you might want to double it.

    If it is wider than your board– just tuck it under. You will be pulling the fabric tight and this will help flatten it down a bit. If it bothers you– trim it so it wraps the sides. You can do a few staples here to keep it all in place if you need.

  4. 4

    Wrap your fabric. Taking the measurement of the board cut the fabric that you have chose about 4 inches larger than board on 3 sides and double the length size on one side.

    With your batting in place, put the fabric on the board and wrap that long tail around the board to the other side. Take the 3 other sides and fold over. {this is where a budy crafter is nice to have around}
    Hold these sides down {tuck in the raw edges} and start stapling them into place.

  5. 5

    Staple a few in one side –go to the opposite side and staple a few there, pulling it a bit tight. Then do the other 2 sides the same way.

  6. 6

    Those are the sides that are shorter….the long side you do last. This cover the whole backside and gets stapled at the other end and along the sides. Makes the back all pretty like.

  7. 7

    I think my favorite part is the customability of them. Make them the size you really need. They are wider than a typical block and a typical ironing board too– so everything fits when you are ironing it!! I love that.