When will you throw a "usable size" piece of fabric in the trash?
#31
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2018
Location: Greater Peoria, IL -- just moved!
Posts: 6,126
The funny thing (to me) is that although I seriously have a list of rules two pages long I'm sent each year, if I lived in the apartments just down the way I wouldn't have to do most of the things. Wouldn't even have to separate out my cans much less wash them.
#32
Sometimes a piece of fabric will end up in a couple of quilts and by the time it gets to about the 2nd or 3rd scrappy quilt I get tired of seeing it so I put it in a pile to toss or donate.
#33
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Illinois
Posts: 1,809
It all depends on what we call scraps. There are the pieces that are trimmed off to square up yardage--that goes in the wastebasket. Then there are the short ends of binding strips, etc. Those get folded and put with the yardage that is left over. Sometimes I need just a short piece to put into another project and I recognize it better with that "larger" piece. If it falls out, not picked up and has become a dust bunny collector, it goes in the wastebasket, too!
#34
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 1,538
csstexas, I would worry that if the clothesline basket contains actual clothes that are wet, the bleeder fabric might bleed onto the clothes.
#35
Super Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Central Wisconsin
Posts: 4,391
My kind of person. I've made at least four quilts out of such stuff. Just sew all those little bitty pieces together and you have beautiful squares of every color under the rainbow. Then put the squares together with sashing and it's beautiful
#36
Super Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Central Wisconsin
Posts: 4,391
I do have a stack of fabrics that have polyester in them that feel nice and are pretty. I am in a bit of a quandary about what to do with them.
Bear: find a small box, label it "polyester" and put all those pretty pieces into it. When you think you have got most of them, make a quilt. To donate if you wish. Try to use it all up, and if there is anything left, put it on the back. It will make you feel good when it's gone and someone else can be warm with it.
Bear: find a small box, label it "polyester" and put all those pretty pieces into it. When you think you have got most of them, make a quilt. To donate if you wish. Try to use it all up, and if there is anything left, put it on the back. It will make you feel good when it's gone and someone else can be warm with it.
#37
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Pennsylvania
Posts: 619
I do the same, nothing goes into the trash, it all gets used in some manner. So very easy to make the pet beds for the animal shelters.
#39
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Somewhere in Time
Posts: 2,697
I have tossed fabric that did not feel like cotton. If I have a blend, I put it on the "free" table at our local "lock-in" where it is available for everyone there to touch and feel it. The next day I make a trip to Goodwill with everything left on the "free" table. In case you are wondering our "lock-in" starts on Friday at 3:00 p.m. and ends at 7:00 a.m. on Saturday.
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 06-22-2019 at 11:39 AM. Reason: shouting/all caps
#40
Never! If I can't use it, which is rare indeed, I will donate it to the thrift store. If it's a "problem" fabric that I can't fix, then I would put it in the bag of unusable scraps for bundling and recycling. For me that's the tiny pieces less than 1" x 3".
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