Gift fabric

People keep giving me fabric.

In the heyday of usenet, I used to get frequent emails to the effect of "hey, I've got too much fabric, would you like some fabric?" and after I said yes an improbably large box would arrive at my home and I'd get to gleefully dive in and see what treasures had arrived. And then, when I was moving into my current home, a friend who was one of the previous occupants gave me her entire stash.

Oh my.

By this point, I had more fabric that I hadn't selected or purchased than fabric that I had selected myself.

I put my friend's stash away and ignored it for a few years, and have never counted it as part of my stash, until I could process it and decide what stays and what goes. I just didn't have the time and energy to deal with it. What little sewing I was getting done was coming mostly out of my stash of stuff I'd selected.

Recently I pulled out my friend's stash and went through it. It has divided into:

  • One large shopping bag full of plain white woven cotton that I'm keeping. I'd guess there must be 30 or 40 yards of it. She clearly bought white like I buy black. I guess it'll bring a lighter tone to my sewing for a while.
  • One large shopping bag full of other basics that I'm keeping.
  • One large shopping bag full of mixed fabrics I plan to give to a friend I taught to sew about a month ago.
  • One large shopping bag full of kids' fabrics and solid color basics that match with them, which I intend to mass-produce into baby clothes for my two pregnant friends.
  • One large shopping bag full of stuff that looks vaguely vintage. I can't really tell if any of it is actually old or if it's all just retro prints, but it might be old. I need to call a friend whose friend makes his living selling vintage fabrics, and see if he's interested. Otherwise some of it is going to become more baby clothes, and some of it is going to get given away.
  • One grocery bag of tiny scraps, which I threw away.
  • Half a grocery bag of assorted lace edgings, some of which look like vintage hand-made lace. I haven't a clue what to do with those, I'm not the lace kind of guy. Maybe my friend who likes to make victorian stuff will want them.

Then I got given a huge garbage bag full of scraps from a professional seamstress. It was difficult just to carry it in the door. I dug through it for a while and decided there was nothing big enough to be usef for anything but quilting, and I couldn't tell what any of the fibers were without giving every individual scrap a burn test, and without knowing anything about the fabric I had no idea how to wash it or with what or if it was even washable or if the dyes would all run... ugh. So I threw it all out. It was a nice gesture to try to give me an opportunity to get something out of the scraps of what I'm told were fairly expensive fabrics, but I just couldn't make anything of it.

Of course, then another friend's mother came for a visit and offered me another shopping bag full of wool fabric. I don't use wool, I can't wear it in anything but a suit. But, I took it in so it wouldn't get thrown out, and I'll give it to my friend I just taught to sew. *sigh* Fortunately, it's in his two favorite colors. I also plan to go through my stash and weed out other fabrics I was given in the past that my friends might find more useful than I do.

So, does everybody else keep getting given large quantities of fabric? And how do *you* deal with it?

Reply to
Tom Farrell
Loading thread data ...

I received a large box of fabrics from my Godmother a few years ago, but I was at her house,and she gave me all the details about each piece, so it fit right at home with my stash. Later, when my aunt became 95-96, her daughters cleared out her sewing room, at her insistence, both hate sewing. She wanted to designate what went to whom, a cousin and I shared most of, not only her stash, but also her sewing tools. The stash was given with all details as before. I was lucky in acquiring a pair of very, very old pinking shears from Russia and one of the first tape measures she bought when she opened her sewing shop in the 1920s. I have the tape saved on acid-free tissue near the sm, and the shears are used almost daily. Last Thanksgiving weekend, a friend was downsizing and gave me a huge bag of mostly knit fabrics, which I sew very little because I seldom wear knit. Most of that bag and some other knits, I had acquired previously, were taken to DD, who sews. She thought that was the greatest thing I could have given her. Dear hubby had given her the new 10-thread Pfaff serger for Christmas. Throughout the year, she has made lots of gifts for friends & relatives already and is busy with this year's Christmas gifts. Emily

Reply to
Emily

I was recently given fabric from a stash belonging to a 100 year old woman, who was not only a sewer, but a bit of a horder too! Add this to my own stash, my daughter's stash and the pieces my mother buys me (she lives in a textile manufacturing and retail area) and we have a teensy problem.

The stash included some super cotton sheets which I may dye and turn into fitted sheets and curtain linings. And (may not mean anything to others than Brits of a certain age) a Brentford nylon, rose pink, stretch, looped nylon fitted sheet still in its original wrapper. A ghastly reminder of the sixties. I'm seriously thinking of having the whole package framed.

Some fabric I've used, some I've stored. Some I've given away to schools, friends and charity shops. Some of the bright, fifties and sixties cotton fabrics pieces (the lady tended to start garments and not finish them - a habit I am only too guilty of) I turned into carrier bags which hang in the utility area and make a dull place a bit brighter. They hold bits of string and cord, old aluminium foil for recycling, bicycle tyre inner tubes, (don't ask - I don't know myself), old towels and dusters. Other cottons have gone into patchwork throws - I'd just bought my first serger and needed the discipline of sewing in straight lines on the new machine before moving onto curves etc!

Some of the satiny stuff I've used to make gift bags - especially sucessful for wrapping Christmas gift bottles and jars. Some really satiny glitzy stuff I used to make little gift bags with drawstrings. The tartan wool lengths I'm going to turn into picnic blankets with a waterproof backing, or car quillows. The really grotty grey brown crimpelenes I've used to make peg bags to hang on the washing line.

I've decided to turn some of the fabric into zipped hanging bags for suits etc - the fabric pattern or type isn't important but if I can just take an outfit from the wardrobe and put it, bag and all into the car it makes life easier (not that I do this much but having just travelled to a wedding, it would have been useful).

Other stash fabric has been used to make giant zipped bags for packing when travelling by car, and mattress covers to protect the spare mattresses which are stored in the floor in the attic TV watching area. Oh and table cloths for nieces and nephews who are just setting up homes.

However, in spite of all this the pile still seems a bit large.

JillT

cut (sorry - institution software won't allow me to post anything with more in quotes than new)

Reply to
Jill Tardivel

No, people don't give me fabric, but I still end up with too much of it.

The ends of projects I've saved and sent off to a lady on the quilting newsgroup who turns it into quilts for creatures at the animal shelter. While they are in the shelter they sleep on these quilts and when they're adopted the quilt goes home with them, easing their transition into their new home.

Nicer pieces go to a friend I helped learn to sew, though I don't know if she's actually using them.

I have a few pieces here I don't know what to do with at all.

Tom, I know what you can do with those bits of lace!!! <smile>

-Charlotte

Reply to
Charlotte
<all previous posting stripped>

A couple of years ago, a lady in one of my groups (maybe the sewing professionals group) asked for scrap fabrics to use in her volunteer work with the mentally handicapped. They were teaching sewing skills. She came over with an SUV and hauled away about six huge bags of stuff from my studio.

And you know what? I don't miss *any* of it.

Karen in Ohio

Reply to
Karen Maslowski

AKKK! Brentford Nylons! Eeeeek! Scuse me while I flash madly as I turn over in bed and cause the telly to flicker... Flash! bang! Oops! Kate falls out of bed, having been struck by 'bed lightning'!

Oh, AND they let the prickles from a woolen underblanket poke through and itch you like mad! Itch/scratch-Itch/scratch-Itch/scratch----Flash! Bang!

Yes, I remember Brentford nylons...

Reply to
Kate Dicey

cut

Reply to
Jill Tardivel

All praise to your institution for installing such software!

People don't give me fabric, but after thirty years, it's about time I went through the stash and separated the wanted from the unwanted. Tastes have changed -- mostly because the Web gives me access to better fabric than I used to buy.

Our Goodwill store has a rack of fabric pieces. I haven't bought any for the want of labels -- Note to self: label mine before dumping there.

When I took Goodwill some shirts I didn't want to alter, I used an "india ink" ball point pen to write "all cotton" on slips of non-woven interfacing, and sewed it to the shirts. For fabric, tough paper basted on would be more appropriate.

After a lengthy deduction to discover which piece was two yards of red ramie and which piece was two yards of red linen, I began pinning labels to each new piece I buy.

*Especially* those that I mean to cut right away.

Joy Beeson

Reply to
joy beeson

InspirePoint website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.