82-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, October 30, 1993 Rug Weaver Finds Time To Preserve Dyi GAIL STROCK Mifflin Co. Correspondent BELLEVILLE (Mifflin Co.) It’s a old-fashioned handicraft that’s easy to leant, inexpensive, and in demand. So why is it a dying art? Because it requires one more ingredient most people now days, unfortunately, are short of time. Mrs. Verna Renno of Belleville, Mifflin County, takes that last important ingredient and puts it to good use braiding rugs out of wool or knit remnants. By making as mahy as 18 to 20 braided rugs each year, Renno is carrying on the craft her mother, grandmother, and her husband’s mother used to do to add warmth and color to the wood floors in their homes. . “It’s a wonder what you can do with material,” she says, sitting in her spacious, finished-off base ment surrounded by boxes and boxes of cloth material. “It’s a good way to use worn out clo thing. People know I do this and give me material from rumage sales and yard sales to make them a rug.” Her average rugs measure three feet by five feet and take her about two weeks. The biggest she’s made was four feet by eight feet, but she says the rugs get awfully heavy at that size. Braided rugs can be made out of wool or knit. She prefers knit Shades of green, brown and beige form this four by five woven rug. Using a large needle with a blunt end, Renno goes through the braids being careful not to catch any material to lace the rug together. All stitches are hidden both front and because it is cleaner to work with. Wool produces a lot of lint. Both both are easy to clean. Mrs. Renno suggests spraying both wool and knit rugs with a rug shampoo and using a sponge in warm water to take off the shampoo. Never put them in the washing machine, she suggests. It’s hard on them and they may come apart. In selecting material, Renno chooses bold colors like red, green, and black. She likes to keep one color consistent throughout, such as black, and tries to keep the color scheme, such as different shades of green, the same through out. She also chooses plain mater ial, but sometimes uses a very small print or plaid. “If I don’t like the color of the knit, I just use the wrong side (of the material),” she adds. When braiding, she uses one dark color with two light ones. The rug she’s working on how is various shades of blue with a con stant black. Renno starts by cutting the material into strips one and one half inches wide and as long as possible. Because wool is a hea vier material, the strips can’t- be cut as wide or the finished braid, which should be a half inch across, would be too wide. Renno keeps half-inch scraps close by for thinner materials that might need a filler strip tucked inside to add bulk. If the strips are short, she cuts the ends on the diagonal and sews the strips together on the sewing machine to make longer strips that make braiding go faster. To start a rug at the center, Renno takes three strips or plaits and puts their ends together, cuts off both comers to make a V shapc, sews these together, and then flips one plait over the raw edge to make a finished V-shaped end. Before braiding, each plait needs to be folded to cover raw edges. Fold each strip'so the raw edges meet in the center, then fold in half again forming a long thick strand. Renno braids a couple of yards to start, keeping the braids tight, then measures it. She believes charging one dollar a yard is the fairest way to come up with a price. It takes about SI yards to make a 32 inch by 48 inch rug. After braiding a while, Renno takes the first 20 inches, although it depends on the size of the rug, and starts stitching the braids together to form the rug’s oval shape. She uses a sturdy black thread from a harness shop if the rug’s continuous color is black. For tans and greens, she uses a beige thread. Renno passes a “stubby” nosed needle through the braid, being careful not to catch any material in the process, then does the same with the braid beside it By doing it this way, all stitches ate hidden, front and back. Renno says it is important to keep the rug stretched out flat when lacing it together, and to not pull the stitch es too tight, otherwise the rug will bulge. Because the thread she uses slips. Rennp knots the ends before knotting a new thread on to con tinue stitching. She hides the knots within the folds of the braids. When the rug is completely woven and stitched, taper off the final braid and end with the darker color. Then simply lace it to the rug to secure it Mrs. Renno began her craft after her husband Erie “retired* after 30 years as pastor of the Locust Grove Mennonite Church. He has spent the past 10 years ministering at Valley View Haven retirement home. They have three daughters. “I always ask the children and grandchildren what they want for their wedding a braided rug or a comfort. They always say a braided rug.” Renno knows how easily one can find material for a rug and hopes this will encourage others to learn the craft. One woman, Renno says, bought the beautiful deep red and black wool from the Woolrich outlet and had her make six rugs. Her nephew, a school teacher in Michigan, gave her 30 of the school’s old knit uniforms.. With only two colors, Renno won dered how the rugs would look, but she wove four circles of a blue/blue/gray scheme then four circles' of a blue/gray/gray scheme, adding that they turned out just fine. She also told her nephew the rugs would out wear him! Verna Renno of Belleville carries on a dwindling tradition —braiding rugs. By sharing tricks of the trade such as con necting lengths diagonally and folding them properly to plait, she hopes to inspire others to learn rug braiding. Mrs. Renno measures the braids and charges by the yard. Craft