FAQ's re quilting---What are some you hear and your replies?
#11
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 379
My FAQ. Is
Would you make me a quilt?
My answer is
You buy the fabric. And I will make the quilt top, then you can get it quilted.
Isn't it funny I never hear from that person again,
People seem to think that we make our quilts for very little cost.
Would you make me a quilt?
My answer is
You buy the fabric. And I will make the quilt top, then you can get it quilted.
Isn't it funny I never hear from that person again,
People seem to think that we make our quilts for very little cost.
#13
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Thornton, Colorado
Posts: 1,023
The question I get asked often is am I in business to make quilts or do quilting for others? My anwer is no because it takes the fun away. I have made a few exceptions, and they are very rare. If I was younger, it might be different.
#14
People ask me "Was it hard?". Yes and no. Some parts may have been hard, some parts may have been easy. And "hard" is relative to the person's skill set. So far every quilt I've made has had a new skill set for me. Once learned, it's no longer difficult.
I also get asked "Oh!! Will you make me one?!?!". The short answer is NO. I make quilts because I enjoy the process and part of the process is choosing everything about the quilt. I will cease to enjoy a process if someone asks for something that is not already in my bucket list (either pattern or color). There is one exception ... I've told my husband's 3 children that each of them will get two quilts from me ... a quilt for their house and a quilt for their baby. I will let them give me general idea's of what they want ... but not specific patterns or fabrics. Although Hannah's house quilt we saw hanging in a quilt shop and I fell in love with it and pointed it out to her and she agreed - it was what she was looking for, but I was already there ahead of her
I also get asked "Oh!! Will you make me one?!?!". The short answer is NO. I make quilts because I enjoy the process and part of the process is choosing everything about the quilt. I will cease to enjoy a process if someone asks for something that is not already in my bucket list (either pattern or color). There is one exception ... I've told my husband's 3 children that each of them will get two quilts from me ... a quilt for their house and a quilt for their baby. I will let them give me general idea's of what they want ... but not specific patterns or fabrics. Although Hannah's house quilt we saw hanging in a quilt shop and I fell in love with it and pointed it out to her and she agreed - it was what she was looking for, but I was already there ahead of her
#15
I always get people I know asking me to do special quilts for them. Usually t-shirt quilts and stuff that requires alot of work. I tell them an estimated price and they don't ask again. I have three t-shirt quilts to make for my own kids. I have one of them started and that's as far as I got...lol. I don't want to do more right now.
Most people gawk when I give them a price because they can go to walmart and get a comforter for under $40. It doesn't hurt my feelings one bit for them to just go buy it there.
Most people gawk when I give them a price because they can go to walmart and get a comforter for under $40. It doesn't hurt my feelings one bit for them to just go buy it there.
#16
Banned
Thread Starter
Join Date: Nov 2009
Posts: 2,893
I had a former classmate ask me to make her one after I first started quilting. Spent HOURS designing it to her specs, found the fabric she wanted used in part of it, researched the cost of having it longarmed (this was before I had my own) and quoted her ---- $950.00! For the work, details and size that was what it was going to cost her for me to do it. I've not heard from her since. I think she is still choking on the quote. But that is o.k. It was going to be a LOT of work!
#17
This one from actual quilters: "How much fabric will I need if I enlarge the pattern or add more blocks to it so it fits my bed?"
I tell them make friends before they need them and make sure one of them had EQ and would be willing to help them out with that.
Or, failing that, get out the trusty pencil, ruler, colored pencils/crayons, and graph paper. Then work it out themselves.
I tell them make friends before they need them and make sure one of them had EQ and would be willing to help them out with that.
Or, failing that, get out the trusty pencil, ruler, colored pencils/crayons, and graph paper. Then work it out themselves.
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09-21-2010 02:35 PM