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How to Make a Hot Pad: Perfect for Hot Casserole Dishes!

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How to make a hot pad for a casserole dish.

How to make a hot pad for a casserole dish. These make great gifts for family and friends because most people don’t have a large pot holder!

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I’ve been eyeballing large pot holders on Pinterest. They look so USEFUL. I’m tired of lining up two small ones to go underneath a hot casserole dish and it seemed simple enough to make a large pot holder. This has been a project I’ve been wanting to do for a while and it did not disappoint. It was fairly simple, it wasn’t terribly time consuming, and they came out really cute.

Best part? Most people have normal size pot holders, but I’m guessing a large one would make a GREAT gift. Making a few of these is no big deal and it’s a great way to practice putting on bias tape.

Or just make your fabric cuts smaller and make small pot holders. Your choice. Same technique.

You might like the following products in my shop! Keep scrolling for the tutorial!

Supplies for an Easy Hot Pad

Supplies listed below may include affiliate links to the products.

  • Insul Brite (this is probably cheaper at the store by the yard)
  • Cotton Batting
  • Fabric
  • Typical sewing machine stuff
  • Bias tape

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How to Make a Hot Pad

Watch this easy video for instructions or scroll down for the photo tutorial.

 

 

 

You’ll cut a rectangle of your top fabric, your bottom fabric, a layer of batting, and a layer of Insul Brite. If you cut your Insul Brite and batting to be slightly smaller than your exterior fabrics, that will help with sewing.

 

For reference, my finished pot holder (the one with the stripes) was 15×9″. I think I made the others slightly larger. I like for the pads to peak out from under the dishes because they’re pretty.

Pin your top fabric to your Insul-Brite and batting. Sew together. I just quilted up the top.

Sew your layers of batting and insul-brite to the top fabric.

Next, you want to add your back fabric. You have two choices… you can face the front fabric right sides together with the back fabric, stitch, leave an opening to turn it, then turn and topstitch.

I liked this method better… I pinned my fabric in the following order: Top fabric, batting/Insul Brite, back fabric. Just like it’ll show up when you finish the hot pad.

Sew the back fabric to your hot pad.

Once I did that, I basted all three together. If you’re clever with adding bias tape, you could probably just put your bias tape on and skip the basting. Pins do hold the layers in place pretty well.

Now you just sew your bias tape on with a straight stitch.

Sew on bias tape to your hot pad.

Don’t forget! Share your final projects on the Stuff Mama Makes Facebook Group!

 

Sew on bias tape to your hot pad.
Yield: 1 Hot Pad

How To Make A DIY Hot Pad

Prep Time: 10 minutes
Active Time: 20 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes
Difficulty: Easy
Estimated Cost: $5-$10

Learn how to make a DIY hot pad for a casserole dish. These also make great gifts for family and friends.

Materials

  • Insul Brite 
  • Cotton Batting
  • Fabric
  • Bias tape

Tools

  • Sewing Machine

Instructions

  1. Cut a rectangle out of your top fabric, bottom fabric, a layer of batting, and a layer of Insul Brite.  
  2. Pin the top fabric to your Insul-Brite and batting. Sew together.
  3. Pin your fabric in the following order: Top fabric, batting/Insul Brite, back fabric. 
  4. Baste all three together.
  5. Sew your bias tape on with a straight stitch.

Did you make this project?

Please leave a comment on the blog or share a photo on Instagram

Other Tutorials in the DIY Gift Series

Please share and pin this post! If you make this project, share it in our Stuff Mama Makes Facebook Group. We have regular giveaways for gift cards to craft stores. You can also tag me on Instagram @doityourselfdanielle; I love seeing everything you make!

Sew a large pot holder for your casserole dish!

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Katrina

Tuesday 30th of April 2019

What size did you make it to fit under a casserole? 10” x14” or bigger?

Danielle

Sunday 5th of May 2019

I would measure your casserole dish and decide on the size you want. You could make it much larger than your dish too if you want to put more than one dish on it. The one I kept for myself is 15x9, but I think I may have made the others a bit bigger. I like for the pad to peek out from under the dish.

Pale Blue Corner

Tuesday 8th of November 2016

Nice tutorial, reminded me, that I need to make something similar for myself for Christmas...Cheers, Emese

Catherine

Monday 12th of September 2016

Great information and yes I did pin it to my Pinterest board. www.pinterest.com/glcmall

Faith...

Sunday 11th of September 2016

How did you layer the fabrics? Was it one layer of each of the Insul Brite and Cotton Batting? Thank you

Danielle

Sunday 11th of September 2016

It doesn't matter which direction you put the batting and insul brite, as long as they are sandwiched between your interior and exterior fabric.

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