Storing quilt tops
#1
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2014
Posts: 9
Storing quilt tops
Hey All!
i need some advice: I do not have a sewing room (it's the dining room table after kiddos go to bed) I am not able to have a place to lay my quilt tops as I finish piecing them. Sometimes they are stored for a few days or a week depending on when I can work on them and finally get to quilting them. The problem is I have been folding them as carefully as I can and placing them on a shelf but each time, they are wrinkled! I choose not to wash my fabric but don't know how to store them if I am low on space and time without getting wrinkles.
Is this the only way to do it and just keep pressing it every so often? I feel that because I have to do that, the fabric starts to stretch ever so slightly...
Any suggestions of different temporary storage would be great. Thanks!
i need some advice: I do not have a sewing room (it's the dining room table after kiddos go to bed) I am not able to have a place to lay my quilt tops as I finish piecing them. Sometimes they are stored for a few days or a week depending on when I can work on them and finally get to quilting them. The problem is I have been folding them as carefully as I can and placing them on a shelf but each time, they are wrinkled! I choose not to wash my fabric but don't know how to store them if I am low on space and time without getting wrinkles.
Is this the only way to do it and just keep pressing it every so often? I feel that because I have to do that, the fabric starts to stretch ever so slightly...
Any suggestions of different temporary storage would be great. Thanks!
#2
Well....I "store" my quilt tops by hanging them on a free wall with painter's tape, because - like you - I don't have an actual sewing room and generally not much space. No wrinkles that way (and no additional pressing either! )!
#4
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: The Deep South near Cajun Country, USA
Posts: 5,434
I hang mine on one of those thick clothes hanger, like you would hang jeans or pants on. I just fold in half, then fold again, however many folds it takes to make it fit inside the hanger. There is minimal wrinkling. And sometimes mine hang for several months. I tend to piece a lot, then go to the long arm for several weeks. I get wrinkling no matter how nice I try to fold them if I don't hang them. I haven't tried the starching bit to keep them from wrinkling.
#7
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Piedmont Virginia in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mtns.
Posts: 8,562
You could also ask your local quilt/fabric store for some of the empty bolt boards (the cardboards that the fabric is rolled onto) and roll them onto those.
If fabric is folded I don't see any way you'll avoid *some* wrinkles.
If fabric is folded I don't see any way you'll avoid *some* wrinkles.
#9
Leah Day uses pool noodles that have been covered in fabric to store her completed quilts...should work for a quilt top just as well! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fmmCmYciURQ is a youtube video of her storage system!
#10
Member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 15
If you are only storing them a short while, you should be able to give them a good press before you baste. Wow, I should have that problem of storing mine for a week or month! I think I have about 4 tote boxes of quilt tops waiting to be quilted - I always press them and they are fine for basting.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post