storing wedding quilts for my grandchildren...22 kiddos from 21 to 1yr!
#1
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 16
storing wedding quilts for my grandchildren...22 kiddos from 21 to 1yr!
What is the best method for long term storage. I have quilted and bound 8 so far with 10 tops finished. I have wrapped them in towels and put them in large plastic containers. I appreciate your advice, thanks
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,538
For long term storage I got a 4 inch wide empty variety roll from a store. I made a sleeve for the roll out of a white sheet. I put a king size sheet on the floor and layered several quilts on top of it. I rolled all the quilts at once onto the roll and secured the sheet ends with large elastics kind of like a giant tootsie roll. I stand the roll up in the spare room on the roll end.
You can also just layer your quilts up on a spare bed and cover with a sheet.
You can also just layer your quilts up on a spare bed and cover with a sheet.
#3
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Michigan
Posts: 11,276
What a wonderful grandma you are!!!
Tartan has provided a great solution. For storage that long, you need to roll them or keep them flat. For rolling, you can also use a length of PVC pipe from the hardware store. The quilts should not be in direct contact with wood, plastic or cardboard, so if you do roll them, you need to cover the tube first. Plastic containers are NOT a good idea at all, the quilts need to breathe and the plastic can trap moisture and ruin them. If either of these methods don't work, then you need to fold them on the bias to minimize permanent creases and store them in a pillowcase on a shelf out of sunlight. No plastic tubs! They need to be taken out & refolded at least once a year. There are several methods you can find on line for diagonal folding, here is one:
http://appliqueandpatches.blogspot.c...t-folding.html
Tartan has provided a great solution. For storage that long, you need to roll them or keep them flat. For rolling, you can also use a length of PVC pipe from the hardware store. The quilts should not be in direct contact with wood, plastic or cardboard, so if you do roll them, you need to cover the tube first. Plastic containers are NOT a good idea at all, the quilts need to breathe and the plastic can trap moisture and ruin them. If either of these methods don't work, then you need to fold them on the bias to minimize permanent creases and store them in a pillowcase on a shelf out of sunlight. No plastic tubs! They need to be taken out & refolded at least once a year. There are several methods you can find on line for diagonal folding, here is one:
http://appliqueandpatches.blogspot.c...t-folding.html
#4
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,538
Auto correct was wrong again! I got an empty 4 inch wide CARPET roll from a store. They come 12 feet long so bring a friend to help load it in a long vehicle or plan on walking home with your friend. I cut mine down to about 8 feet with a hack saw.
Last edited by Tartan; 11-13-2014 at 09:09 AM.
#8
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Sonoma County, CA
Posts: 4,299
How wonderful!! My gran gave me a quilt when my DH & I moved out together; it's too small for our current bed but we use it anyway because I love it so much and it's sooo cozy. Grandma quilts are the best! Your grandkids are all very lucky.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
QuiltnNan
General Chit-Chat (non-quilting talk)
6
10-26-2011 04:19 PM