TheQuiltingCoach.com, resources for beginner quilters
Home | Quilters Talk | Open Forum | Tell a Friend | Text Size | Search | Member Area
 Join Us
Instant Access...
to All Our Quilting Goodies!

 About this Site
TAKE A TOUR
Affiliate Program
About Penny
About TheQuiltingCoach
Join Today
Penny's Postcard Posse
Sample Articles
Sample Audio & Video
Sample Quilting Tips
The Quilting Bee

HACKER 
SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
 DEPARTMENTS
Penny's Inner Circle
Star Members
Quilting Articles
Digitizers' Delight
Quilting e-Courses
How-to Audio Clips
How-to Video Clips
Quilting History
Quilt Block Recipes
Quilt Block Patterns
Quilting Terms
Learn to Quilt Blog
Master Quilter Program
Medallion Quilt Contest
Newsletters
Quilting Bee Advisors
Quilting Tip of the Week
Quilting Tools
Resource Directory
Most Popular
Site Map
Subscribe to our RSS Feed
 RESOURCES
Convergence Experiment
Download Library
Eavesdrop Transcripts
Our Marketplace
Quilting Webinars
Eavesdrop Recordings
Quilting Tips
EQ6 & EQ7
Help
Text Size
Contact Us
Your Account
 Image Gallery
Quilt Gallery
Haunted House Quilts
Star Member Quilts
MQ Adventure Quilts

 PRODUCTS
Quilting DVDs
Business Webinars
Quilting Software
Quilting Supplies
Quilting Books



 Business Coaching
Business Coaching
Business Resources
Written for You
Done for You
Online Seminar incl eBay
Online ShoestringSeminar
Shoestring Seminar
 Other
Our Guarantee
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Tell a Friend


This site powered by MemberGate

| Quilting Tips | Storing Fabric
 

Storing Fabric

Printer-Friendly Format

Maybe 2007 is the year to get the entire stash of fabric organized. Maybe.

If it is, here are some tips for storing long lengths of fabric. Most quilters store their fabric by color -- reds together, yellows together, etc.

When it comes to prints, it becomes a little more difficult. Many of us look at a print and pick out the main color and keep it in that group. Others keep all of their prints together.

I keep my prints mixed in with the colors, and separate my batiks and flannels. Within the batik, wool and flannel piles, the fabric is organized by color. That makes it easier to sort the fabric for a flannel or wool quilt. And when working with batiks, I usually begin with that fabric, and then go to my cotton stash to fill in the remainder of the quilt.

Here are some general tips for organizing:

1. Hang your fabric on pants hangers -- fold the fabric in half selvedge to selvedge. Then fold it either accordion-style or as if it were coming off of the bolt in the fabric store so it is the width of the clamps on the hanger. Clamp the selvedge edges on the hanger.

2. Roll your fabric on cardboard mailing tubes

3. Fold it neatly on shelves with the folded side facing out. If your shelves are open, you can use roll-up window blinds to cover it and prevent the fabric from fading.

4. Fold the fabric so it is approximately 8" by 11" and then place it, fold side up, in drawers in a filing cabinet, like you can buy at an office supply store. (This one is especially nice for making your quilting look like a business. Keep the cabinet locked and everyone will think you have a ton of important papers!)

5. Fold the fabric and stack it in plastic see-through boxes or other plastic tubs. If you use boxes that you can't see into, be sure to label the contents.




Printer-Friendly Format
·  Rotary Cutting your Fabric
·  Lesson 2 - Calculating Fabric Requirements
·  Possibilities for Color and Design
·  Selecting Fabric for Your Quilting Project
·  Pre-Wash your Fabric