Making a list of quality fabric brands/designers
#42
Ghostrider has very valid points....like on everything else...the "name" doesn't always mean perfect.....
Btw...you said you had made/sold something and then had to refund $ because of fading after washing....many ?? in my head....how washed? how often? Care instructions included? Did you check for bleed/fade before construction?
Btw...you said you had made/sold something and then had to refund $ because of fading after washing....many ?? in my head....how washed? how often? Care instructions included? Did you check for bleed/fade before construction?
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#43
You are going to find good and bad in every brand of fabric. I don't look at the name of the manufacturer...If ordering online, I take that into account, but it's not my deciding factor. If I buy a fabric online (usually batiks & muslins), I check it when the order comes in...if it's not up to my standards/needs, then I contact the company and return it. I've only had to do this twice in 10 years...so, not bad.
All those cottons you tossed because they weren't name brands, probably were just fine...I'd have used them, or donated them to charity.
All those cottons you tossed because they weren't name brands, probably were just fine...I'd have used them, or donated them to charity.
#44
I really need an experienced person to go with me and show me what exactly to look for. After feeling the quality in quilt shop fabrics I am turned off by the thin, soft fabrics I used to buy, even thought I love the prints.
#46
Power Poster
Join Date: May 2008
Location: MN
Posts: 24,441
Just checked Hancock's web site - they still have Kona Solid cottons listed for sale (for $8.99/yard). A lot of people still seem tolike Kona solids.
I think almost any line can get a "bad" fabric now and then.
I think almost any line can get a "bad" fabric now and then.
#48
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: greater NorthEast
Posts: 3,004
just because your fabric has a fancy name on the selvedge, doesn't mean it's superior in any way.....all lines of all brands are not created equal, that's for sure. i recently bought some Phillip Jacobs for Kaffe Fassett -- those gorgeous cabbage rose prints & when i got it, it was SO thin i couldn't believe it! definitely inferior to LQS -- i should have complained or returned it, but i had other things going on & just never got around to it....won't happen again.....
#49
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Texas
Posts: 3,667
I used to make cage sets for sugar gliders. Cotton on the outside and fleece on the inside. Never had anyone complain, nor have I had personal problems with fabric until I came across this one I purchased at Hancock. I prewashed all my fabric before sewing the sets. I made a bonding bag, that I kept and it faded out as well, so I knew what she was telling me about her set was so.
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Kif
#50
A highly praised fabric shop, local or online, will not consciously sell inferior quality merchandise. They just aren't willing to mar their reputation in order to undersell the competition. Look at the shops named on your other thread. Odds are that any fabric you purchase from any of those shops will meet your 'quality' standards. And if it doesn't, most of them will work with you to make it right.
If you want to be extra safe, go with Keepsake Quilting. They have a no quibble guarantee. You can return any purchase at any time for any reason, no questions asked.
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