Ideas For Small Gifts to Make for A Quilter
#32
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Upstate New York
Posts: 1,231
My friend made me a small ring binder with a faux quilted cover(just glued to look like a dresden block)...inside she made pages with spaces for samples of fabric, who made it, where I bought it..etc. Very handy!
#33
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: MO (the Show Me state)
Posts: 2,947
http://gigisquilts.blogspot.com/2011...ar-thread.html
#35
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Somewhere inTexas
Posts: 968
One of the guilds I belong to has new member tote bags. Each new member gets one. The bag includes a member book with all members and phone numbers listed, copy of the by laws, meeting agenda, guild calendar of events and a member pin and card. A new rotary cutter, a 5" x 10" EZ Jelly Roll ruler (for charm and layer cake cutting) and a jelly roll. We may have a couple of new members a year so the expense isn't much at all.
I gave each of my sew group a composition book of graph paper and a box of colored pencils. I made fabric covers for the books. with an outside pocket to hole the box of pencils. I bought a lot of the books and pencils at the back to school sale so each gift cost me under $3. I didn't count the cost of fabric for the cover, it was sitting in my stash so I consider that free.
I gave each of my sew group a composition book of graph paper and a box of colored pencils. I made fabric covers for the books. with an outside pocket to hole the box of pencils. I bought a lot of the books and pencils at the back to school sale so each gift cost me under $3. I didn't count the cost of fabric for the cover, it was sitting in my stash so I consider that free.
#36
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: MO (the Show Me state)
Posts: 2,947
Quiltingdragon I use to do a lot of online swaps and was in the secret pal one for a couple of years.
Fun things I made:
~Potholders - we all use them and they can be holiday themed, fun fabrics, color palette, any thing you want. One of my most popular were the fingertip potholders to use in the microwave. Also the microwave bowl potholders may be a great gift.
~ Triangular thread catchers
~Pincushions - I know, I know we all probably have a bunch of them but small ones to take on retreats or sew days are great. I made fun owl themed ones decked out for the different holidays.
Things I find to be helpful:
~Bobbin boxes to take on sew days or retreats full of filled bobbins. At $.99 I bought several and filled bobbins for my different machines.
~Magnetic Seam Guides - I have found them very useful for all of my vintage machines. I used them to teach my sister & niece to seam perfect 1/4" seams. Not sure how they will work with the computerized machines due to the magnet. At $.99 each the price was perfect and I have one at each of my vintage machines.
~Stilettos or Purple Thang or Chopsticks - all are useful when needed to help the fabric get under the needle. I have bought and gave both Purple Thangs and Chopsticks in swaps. The handmade stilettos I've received I love. Chopsticks are very cheap to purchase at the Asian grocery stores. I got like 100 pairs for under $5.
~Small hair scrunchies for bobbin threads - I gave plenty of these in swaps to keep the threads from unwinding on bobbins. All of the filled bobbins in my cases have hair scrunchies on them. You can usually get a bag of about 300 from Family Dollar for under $5.00.
~Thread snips, Seam rippers, Embroidery scissors- I prefer embroidery scissors over seam rippers but I know there is a need for all in this category. Thread snips are inexpensive on Ebay as you can get 3 pairs for about $1.50. There are a variety of styles. Embroidery scissors are about $2.00/pr on Ebay. There are a variety of styles available. Seam rippers are also about $.99 for 4 pieces.
~Rotary blade replacements - there is always a need for new rotary blades. There are some inexpensive buys on Ebay.
~Tote bags - On my sew days at my sister's I take a mountain of stuff with me. I have stuff in all sorts of bags currently. Now I am making me a large upcycled denim bag to tote my things in. There are so many free simple tote bag tutorials online from very simple to more elaborate.
~Miscellaneous - packs of colored pencils (Dollar Store), small spiral bound notebooks to doodle in, quilt marking pens/pencils. You can buy remnants from the LQS and make scrap bags. Some of the LQS sell them for around $3.00 - $5.00. Everyone love scraps right? Also hit the LQS on $1.00 FQ sales. Who doesn't love to get EQ's? These little fabric baskets would make great gifts or door prizes. Filled them up with other goodies.
One thing I have too many of/don't use is mug rugs. I know they are popular and fun/quick to make I just do not use them.
What guild are you with in St. Louis?
[ATTACH=CONFIG]556116[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]556117[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]556118[/ATTACH]
Fun things I made:
~Potholders - we all use them and they can be holiday themed, fun fabrics, color palette, any thing you want. One of my most popular were the fingertip potholders to use in the microwave. Also the microwave bowl potholders may be a great gift.
~ Triangular thread catchers
~Pincushions - I know, I know we all probably have a bunch of them but small ones to take on retreats or sew days are great. I made fun owl themed ones decked out for the different holidays.
Things I find to be helpful:
~Bobbin boxes to take on sew days or retreats full of filled bobbins. At $.99 I bought several and filled bobbins for my different machines.
~Magnetic Seam Guides - I have found them very useful for all of my vintage machines. I used them to teach my sister & niece to seam perfect 1/4" seams. Not sure how they will work with the computerized machines due to the magnet. At $.99 each the price was perfect and I have one at each of my vintage machines.
~Stilettos or Purple Thang or Chopsticks - all are useful when needed to help the fabric get under the needle. I have bought and gave both Purple Thangs and Chopsticks in swaps. The handmade stilettos I've received I love. Chopsticks are very cheap to purchase at the Asian grocery stores. I got like 100 pairs for under $5.
~Small hair scrunchies for bobbin threads - I gave plenty of these in swaps to keep the threads from unwinding on bobbins. All of the filled bobbins in my cases have hair scrunchies on them. You can usually get a bag of about 300 from Family Dollar for under $5.00.
~Thread snips, Seam rippers, Embroidery scissors- I prefer embroidery scissors over seam rippers but I know there is a need for all in this category. Thread snips are inexpensive on Ebay as you can get 3 pairs for about $1.50. There are a variety of styles. Embroidery scissors are about $2.00/pr on Ebay. There are a variety of styles available. Seam rippers are also about $.99 for 4 pieces.
~Rotary blade replacements - there is always a need for new rotary blades. There are some inexpensive buys on Ebay.
~Tote bags - On my sew days at my sister's I take a mountain of stuff with me. I have stuff in all sorts of bags currently. Now I am making me a large upcycled denim bag to tote my things in. There are so many free simple tote bag tutorials online from very simple to more elaborate.
~Miscellaneous - packs of colored pencils (Dollar Store), small spiral bound notebooks to doodle in, quilt marking pens/pencils. You can buy remnants from the LQS and make scrap bags. Some of the LQS sell them for around $3.00 - $5.00. Everyone love scraps right? Also hit the LQS on $1.00 FQ sales. Who doesn't love to get EQ's? These little fabric baskets would make great gifts or door prizes. Filled them up with other goodies.
One thing I have too many of/don't use is mug rugs. I know they are popular and fun/quick to make I just do not use them.
What guild are you with in St. Louis?
[ATTACH=CONFIG]556116[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]556117[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]556118[/ATTACH]
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 08-17-2016 at 02:40 PM. Reason: remove copyright image, should have used a link
#37
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Middlebury, IN
Posts: 1,484
You can find them in most baking section, they are for lacing turkeys.
Here's a tutorial: http://quiltville.com/pdf/TurkeyLacerStilettos.pdf
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 08-17-2016 at 02:42 PM. Reason: remove copyright pdf
#38
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 9,709
I would like to vote for tweezers. When I was at a LQS the other day they had the best tweezers for only $4.00 a piece and up until then I hadn't thought of keeping a pair in my sewing basket until then and I have been quilting since 1978 and when I needed tweezers I would just get them out of the bathroom, now I have them in my sewing room.
#39
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Florida
Posts: 5,963
Let's see, the most often used or immediately used
- a pair of snips that don't have an up or down, you just pick it up and use. No need to insert fingers into a hole like scissors.
- a button/pincushion made out of a glass canning jar. The top is the pincushion. Handy buttons inside, but of course I added all my spares to it.
- Seam ripper with the rubber end to pull threads.
- A friend made an ironing curve out of a half circle dowel, she glued batting to it and stitched a muslin cover for it. Great for open seam pressing.
Never used. Cheap batiks and fat quarters.
- a pair of snips that don't have an up or down, you just pick it up and use. No need to insert fingers into a hole like scissors.
- a button/pincushion made out of a glass canning jar. The top is the pincushion. Handy buttons inside, but of course I added all my spares to it.
- Seam ripper with the rubber end to pull threads.
- A friend made an ironing curve out of a half circle dowel, she glued batting to it and stitched a muslin cover for it. Great for open seam pressing.
Never used. Cheap batiks and fat quarters.
#40
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Maine-ly Florida
Posts: 3,926
Lighted needle threaders, itty bitty sissors (those are really the name of them),fun post its, fat quarters folded into a star shape...I would not want kleenex holders since I can make my own. Oh, and the scrap basket pattern that come with the metal hoop.
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