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How to Make Great Char Cloth

Friday, August 24, 2012 3:42
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(Before It's News)

When you’re lighting a fire with a flint and steel or other striker that makes fire from sparks, char cloth is your friend.  Char cloth can make the difference between getting a fire started and just throwing sparks around.  Char cloth is blackened fabric that catches a spark, starts burning, and won’t blow out until it’s burned out.  It works kind of like charcoal, but it burns faster and it’s far easier to light.  You want some in your fire starting supplies, and it is super easy to make, so let’s get started.

What you’ll need:

100% cotton fabric. The looser weave the better.  Jersey t-shirt material will work, but it doesn’t catch spark as well as terry (towel material) or my favorite, monk’s cloth (I purchased mine at Wal-Mart).  You can use your old towels for this project as long as they are 100% cotton.  I’ve heard that any natural fiber fabric would work (silk, linen, hemp, etc.), but haven’t tried any except cotton.  Polyester, rayon, spandex and the like are not natural fibers.  Don’t use those.
Can for cooking the fabric. I used an old chocolate sampler can–similar to an altoids can.  You can also use a cleaned out vegetable can with foil for a lid or a little larger container like the holiday cookie tins.  Punch an air hole in the lid of your can for the smoke to escape.
Heat source. I like a fire.  It’s cheap and fast.  You can also use a camp stove or your gas grill or other similar cooking device.

cooking tin and cotton monk's cloth (quarter for scale)

How to make char cloth:

Step 1: Cut your fabric. You can cut it into large pieces that you can tear apart after they’re charred, or cut it into little individual serving size squares (about 1 1/2 inches square is plenty).

Step 2: Place the fabric in the can and close the lid. Don’t pack it too tightly–you want air circulation in the can.

That tin of fabric is in there somewhere . . .

Step 3: Cook the can of fabric on your heat source. I was told to cook it until it stops smoking, but that can be kind of hard to determine in a fire pit.  This is really best done outside–the burning fabric doesn’t smell all that good.  Generally 15 minutes or so should be plenty.  If it’s taking longer to get fully blackened and be able to break easily, you may have too much fabric stuffed in your can.  There’s nothing wrong with leaving that can in the fire until the whole fire burns out, but 15 minutes should be sufficient to char your cloth.

finished monk's cloth char cloth

Step 4: Let the char cloth cool. It is now ready to use or pack carefully in your fire starting supplies.  Finished char cloth is fairly fragile–it tears and breaks much easier than uncooked fabric, so you may want to put it in a protective container rather than just a baggie tossed in your kit.

burning char cloth

That’s not too hard, right?  To use your char cloth, place it where a spark will land on it from your striking tool.  Use the lit char cloth to light your other tinder and get your fire going.



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