Saturday, 06 June 2009
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It has not escaped my notice that I am not really throwing anything away.
I am making huge progress in my stash reduction process. I have an obscene amount of quilting fabric, but not a lot of yardage but mostly remnants and scraps. And it’s not disorganized; the fabric is already sorted by color or style into Rubbermaid totes, and the totes are neatly labeled on both ends. I have separated all of the dressmaking and other fabrics and store those totes in other parts of the attic, so the “quilting” area of the attic contains only cotton fabric, batting, a few file boxes of quilt class patterns and paperwork, various class supply/visual aid boxes, quilt frames, and other quilt-related
stufftools and supplies. It looks good up there, but those totes are whited sepulchers. They appear nice and clean on the outside, but in reality they are crammed so full of fabric that it’s hard to find and use the pieces I want. It’s a wadded-up mess. Every time I want to do a project, I have to dig through tangles of unusable little pieces and strips, and it’s all so stubbornly wrinkled that I have to wet it down before I can press it smooth. I want my fabric supply to be accessible and usable.I do have a system, but I have not previously applied it to the entire stash. It’s a big project, and time-consuming, but it works for me. One box at a time, I am sorting through every bit of the fabric. Any pieces smaller than a fat quarter or odd shapes are pressed and cut into 2″ strips. If they are too small for that, I cut them into 1 1/2″ strips. Anything too small for that DOES get thrown away. The remaining fabric pieces get pressed, folded, and put back in their tub. If a larger piece is not square/rectangular, I cut off the odd ends and strip those, replacing the tidied-up larger piece in the tote.
I really do use these strips. OFTEN. It’s a very convenient system for me, because I like scrap quilts. I enjoy rummaging through the ready-to-use strips. The problem is that they multiply. In their nice dark totes, up there in the attic at night, some kind of reproductive process is happening. I currently have two 18-gallon Rubbermaid totes packed full of 2″ strips and one of 1 1/2″ strips, and I need more NOW.
A few months ago, I sewed seven tablerunners and two baby quilts from the 1 1/2″ strip tote without making a noticable dent in the stash. Over the years, I have made innumerable large and small quilts from these boxes, but they never get emptier. Sometimes I get low on one specific color, but sooner or later they reproduce themselves and I once again have enough to make more quilts.
I have dressmaking friends who sometimes send me big boxes of their scraps. When I am organized like this, all of their gift eventually gets used. Efficient organization and storage prevents waste.
Now if only I could apply that concept to my kitchen…
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Comments (3)
Oh yes it does multiply on it's own - sigh. I really hate rummaging through totes, especially when they're stacked. I used to have floor-to-ceiling shelves on one wall that I made curtains for, to keep the dust off, and that worked REALLY well. I think we need something like a home library, but with fabric on the shelves....
I used to say that Tupperware was like rabbits. Lock two pieces in a cupboard and in the morning you have ten. I now apply this principle to fabric. 1/4 yd. touching a scrap of another ends up multiplying until you have the equivalency of several bolts sitting in your closet.
It must be something about this time of year. I have been trying to re-organize and find better systems too. I don't have fabric scraps ~ I have clothes I have... "grown" out of. Since it was medication that caused it, I was determined to get back down, but I have been having trouble with that. I just went through and eliminated a whole bunch of those clothes, giving them to Goodwill.
I also need to organize for my hobby - jewelry. I have more beads than space to put them in. I think my family would like the space behind the couch back. lol