Five year rule
#21
Power Poster
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: East Oklahoma - pining for Massachusetts
Posts: 10,477
I have some fabrics that I bought when I started quilting in 1992. Hang on, you will either use them or something else and then the space will be available. You just know when you get rid of something that a month later you will need it.....
#22
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: howell, Mi
Posts: 2,345
When I settled on quilting, I got rid of everything else pertaining to crafts. I have tried every craft known to man. I did keep my cross stitch things (some of them), but every thing else went. I put a couple of free ads in my local newspaper, and got lots of replies. That took care of all the fabric that I would never use. Then I gave all my ribbon and silk flowers to the school that my DGDs attended. I have never looked back and couldn't tell you about all the fabric that I gave away, but several new sewers and quilters were very happy campers. Some of my fabric is over 5 years old, and I don't have any plans to get rid of it. Some of the big box store fabric will be used for charity quilts next year. I have become a fabric snob. lol Not proud of it buy will admit it.
Sue
Sue
#23
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Nawth o' Boston
Posts: 1,879
Whoa! Read your second post, Bama, and it looks like you are really crowded. I'm jealous! I'm equally crowded but I don't have all the cool equipment you do!
My advice is - if it works and you might use it someday andyou have room for it, keep it! If you'll never need to buy one again and you don't use it, dispose of it.
But for heaven's sake keep your stash - and like the other poster said, be sure to stroke it before you fold it and put away.
That said...I generally don't buy misc random stuff (except for shoes!), and I don't dispose of anything I have bought unless it is broken and can't be economically fixed. Toaster and hair drier breakdowns are big on my hitlist of breaks-every-two-years products which I hate. I am still wearing a gorgeous pair of leather boots bought at Marshalls/TJ's maybe 25 years ago and I get compliments, and all they need is soles, heels, and occasional stitch, and polish. When clothes leave my house they go to a recycling bin because they are not 'gently worn' LOL, unless they shrunk! I have kept gowns and outfits I love even if I never weigh 90LB again because...uh-oh! Because!
My advice is - if it works and you might use it someday andyou have room for it, keep it! If you'll never need to buy one again and you don't use it, dispose of it.
But for heaven's sake keep your stash - and like the other poster said, be sure to stroke it before you fold it and put away.
That said...I generally don't buy misc random stuff (except for shoes!), and I don't dispose of anything I have bought unless it is broken and can't be economically fixed. Toaster and hair drier breakdowns are big on my hitlist of breaks-every-two-years products which I hate. I am still wearing a gorgeous pair of leather boots bought at Marshalls/TJ's maybe 25 years ago and I get compliments, and all they need is soles, heels, and occasional stitch, and polish. When clothes leave my house they go to a recycling bin because they are not 'gently worn' LOL, unless they shrunk! I have kept gowns and outfits I love even if I never weigh 90LB again because...uh-oh! Because!
#24
Power Poster
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Southern California
Posts: 19,127
I have clothes that I bought at Robinson May so I wouldn't use that rule. I do try to occasionally sort thru my stash and try to purge the fabrics that I realize I will never get around to using them. I would NEVER give up my lovely collection of watercolor Hoffman. I have been slowly using them because you can't take them with you when you die unless the mortuary allows you to be buried with them.
#25
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Jozefow, Poland
Posts: 4,474
#26
I bought this floral print on a whim at the Paducah Quilt show in 2000. It isn't anything like my style and I had no reason to purchase it other than it spoke to me. When the tsunami and earthquake hit Japan in 2011, there were calls for comfort quilts to send to the people there. (Japan has a huge quilting culture) I made this Attic Windows quilt to send and it was absolutely perfect since the print was a kimono reproduction. So no, you can't keep something that you felt strongly about too long.
#28
If it's fabric of any kind it stays, sometime it will be just what you need for that special project. Even the polyester double knit - makes great "pockets" for things like your friend's paintings that she wants protected to carry to an art show. Also wonderful for camping or picnic quilts.
#29
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Somewhere
Posts: 15,506
Good grief - everything in my kitchen is at least 40 years old. My sewing machines are ALL over 5 years old and many over 50 or 100 years old and those are the ones that work after 5 years anyway... Some of my best shoes are older than that, too. My house is over 50 years old - 5 years... I think you need to look into going GREEN....
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post