fancythat
Dont get me started.
A relative used to be jumpy if he cut off too much string!
When I was a child, parcels came wrapped in brown paper and tied with string. One of our jobs was saving, smoothing and folding the paper to be re-used. The other, was collecting all the used string, tying the ends togegther and rolling it in to a ball, to be re-used. Nothing was ever thrown away, everything recycled. A rag and bone man used to drive round in a horse and cart shouting his trade, and if you had any rags or bits of metal you couldn't make use of, he'd take them and pay with a few pennies or a bar of whiting for the step.
My grandmother made all her rags into rugs on sacking ( the only coverings they had on the floors). Old clothes worn out by to adults were often cut up so the less damaged bits used to make smaller clothes for children. By the time Granny had finallt "retired" the last scraps of material, we cut them into strips for her to make rugs. Knitted jumpers with holes in, were unravelled , the wool rolled into balls and re-knitted into something else.