SCORE!!!!
#21
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: AuGres Mi.
Posts: 1,046
I love thrift stores and rummage sale, not my kids,they don't ever want to go, but my daughter, loved my columbia jacket,new for 10.00 bucks. should have kept it myself.Can find quilts and fabric and sewing tools,what joy
#22
Hi David..
I don't do Sal stores... don't really have one and DO NOT need another thing in this house!!! LOL
My Sister though gets great things... gifts for people you would not believe..and as for T-shirts... i will post the tshirt quilt i made for my grandson... not the best construction.. but it was a gift at his HS graduation.. i had saved shirts from when he was 5 and it actually brought water to his eyes.. (trust me , that was somethng)... he asked how i had them... anywhoooo, it's a great way to start quilting without a lot of investment.. and i can just see them in "tie dye"!!!!
I don't do Sal stores... don't really have one and DO NOT need another thing in this house!!! LOL
My Sister though gets great things... gifts for people you would not believe..and as for T-shirts... i will post the tshirt quilt i made for my grandson... not the best construction.. but it was a gift at his HS graduation.. i had saved shirts from when he was 5 and it actually brought water to his eyes.. (trust me , that was somethng)... he asked how i had them... anywhoooo, it's a great way to start quilting without a lot of investment.. and i can just see them in "tie dye"!!!!
#24
Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Bridgewater, MA
Posts: 97
Originally Posted by quilting cat
T-shirts? Aren't they a little hard to put in a quilt?
#26
My son got a job as a repair technician in a shop that presses and such. It was terribly dirty. On a whim I went to SA and got him about 20 tees for $10. It was Sr day and everything was half off! He's still wearing some of the ones that he managed not to get any crud on.
Congrats on the good deal!
Congrats on the good deal!
#28
Super Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Mason, Ohio
Posts: 1,465
I know how happy you are. I've lucked out with Kate Spade purses (retail $125) for $5.00 and a healthy back (Ameribag) purse for $3.00, brand new. Embroidered my initials and it looks like the one I bought from LLBean about 8 years ago. Also found a Land's End men's duffle coat (made in England) for $7.50.
#29
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Some where in way out West Texas
Posts: 3,041
Originally Posted by davidwent
I had never been in a Salvation Army store. Listening to my friends comments here I decided to go today. They had T-shirts for .99- $1.99 , which wasn't too much of a surprise as I had heard this. What was a surprise was when I went to check out all the white tags which all of mine were another 50% off!!! I ended up with 15 T's for 13 bucks!!!!
Another shocker was the amount they had and how it was set up, not just 1 or 2 bins but 4 rows about 25' long stuffed with t-shirts and also were hung so neatly with all like colors together. They even had a camo and.....I was in heaven.. TIE DIE section!!!!
Now I am laughing at myself for how excited I am about this! LOL
David
Another shocker was the amount they had and how it was set up, not just 1 or 2 bins but 4 rows about 25' long stuffed with t-shirts and also were hung so neatly with all like colors together. They even had a camo and.....I was in heaven.. TIE DIE section!!!!
Now I am laughing at myself for how excited I am about this! LOL
David
#30
Originally Posted by Ramona Byrd
NikkiLu]What are you going to use the T-shirts for?
Just recently I started cutting a mess of T shirts up for a rug. I cut off the neck, sleeves and hem, then then cut round and round in about 1 inch rows till I had almost all of each one wound up in a ball. Then I crocheted them into a long chain and wound them around and around, sewing as I went. This will be for in a small space where the cats love to lie but it's still in a walkway.[/quote]
I can't remember where I saw it (probably here), but a quick way to cut tees into strips is to cut straight across at the armhole to get rid of the sleeves and neck area, leaving you with the body as a tube. Take the resulting tube and rotary cut it into strips the width you want, but not all the way across. Leave an inch or two still joined at one folded edge. Then start at one end and cut diagonally across to the next row and repeat until you reach the bottom. When you tug on the knit strip it will curl, and you won't notice the little angled section.
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