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Where do you buy your material when you are making charity quilts?

Where do you buy your material when you are making charity quilts?

Old 06-12-2012, 05:23 PM
  #91  
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I think they should be grateful that you make them and donate them. I think you s/b able to buy your fabric wherever you like and as long as it is decent if they don't want them donate to someone else they will see someone who needs it gets it. Sue
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Old 06-12-2012, 05:26 PM
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I agree with you. one should not dictate where the fabric comes from as long as it meets the quality standards of the organization where the finished quilts are going. I was fortunate to be able to get fabric from one of the major manufacturers before they closed their warehouse near here and at a very good price. So I loaded up for the future.
I have been using it for my own charity quilts and sharing with many here on the board. It is not all LQS quality but certainly good enough for the chairity quilts (do you read into this big box store). Although they also had the LQS quality as well. If I were you I would ask why they specify the certain stores. There may be something underfoot going on there. On the other hand why pay $12.00 per yd for fabric that is going to be dragged around on a dirty floor. The other gets just as dirty and lasts just as long. One time I sent a box to a quild in South Florida and there happened to be some blends in the box. The guild would only pay shipping for the portion that was 100% cotton. What stuck up people. Who did they think the quilts went to in South Florida.
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Old 06-13-2012, 05:13 AM
  #93  
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I love the independent attitudes of the quilters who have replied and agree wholeheartedly. My opinion is that we should use fabrics for charity quilts that we would find acceptable for use for ourselves.

Personally, I tend to shop at the LQS more than any other place but have stocked up on good finds in the clearance room at 1/2 price for planned charity quilting which ends up to be less expensive than most other retailers. Of course the selection is hit or miss.

I did find a local retailer with very inexpensive quilting cottons, many made by the same manufacturers that I often see at the LQS. Last time I was there, the price was 1.99 to 2.99 a yard and they had a really nice selection of kid-type prints. Mixed reviews on customer service though they've always been pleasant when I've been there. In the Boston area.
http://sewfisticated.com/
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Old 06-13-2012, 05:41 AM
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Originally Posted by Mazda View Post
My quilt guild will use any fabric we can get!
My Guild also. We have a large community outreach program that makes quilts and pillowcases and most of the fabrics we use are donated. Many of the fabrics were bought at LQS, online or even Joann's but we all have been quilting for some time and can weed out the fabrics that aren't worthy of being used in a quilt.

I stock up with good quality fabrics when I'm in Lancaster PA and the half priced ones at LQS, these fabrics are used for my own quilts and the pillowcases and charity quilts I make for my guild and several other groups.

Last edited by May in Jersey; 06-13-2012 at 05:48 AM.
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Old 06-13-2012, 05:59 AM
  #95  
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cmw0829 wrote "I did find a local retailer with very inexpensive quilting cottons, many made by the same manufacturers that I often see at the LQS. Last time I was there, the price was 1.99 to 2.99 a yard and they had a really nice selection of kid-type prints. Mixed reviews on customer service though they've always been pleasant when I've been there. In the Boston area. http://sewfisticated.com/

Thanks so much for this site. Will stop at one of the shops next time we visit family in Rockland. I miss the Fabric Place shops where I could get quilting and decorating fabrics at good prices. May in Jersey
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Old 06-13-2012, 06:13 AM
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Originally Posted by May in Jersey View Post
Thanks so much for this site. Will stop at one of the shops next time we visit family in Rockland. I miss the Fabric Place shops where I could get quilting and decorating fabrics at good prices. May in Jersey
Oh how I miss The Fabric Place. One year, when my DS was still young enough (9ish) to wear mommy-made clothes, I bought a ton of remnants and made him a shorts and t-shirt summer wardrobe on my serger. That was before I started quilting but remember the rows and rows of cotton fabrics.

I've only been to Sewfisticated's Dorchester store. The Framingham store is in the old Fabric Place building. I suspect that's where they have the home-dec fabrics because there isn't much in Dorchester.
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Old 06-14-2012, 04:43 PM
  #97  
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I've met those people before...cousins to quilt police. When I was in a quilt group, one of the ladies even made them out polyester which is actually way better than it sounds. That's all she could afford and picked up a lot at garage sales and I said more power to her! They were well done and was happy for each contribution. Some of the other ladies were almost competing for biggest and best which seemed almost inappropriate for kids. Your local quilt shop may offer good discounts if you are a bonafide guild. Also, buying good brands is important and most well established stores carry those and not the cheap stuff.
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Old 06-15-2012, 04:25 AM
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Face it, the LQS is not the one and only source of quality material for quilt making. Bonnie Hunter makes show quilts out of mens shirts from places like Goodwill and thrift stores or out of closets. Easy enough to pick out the 100% cotton ones. I would use them for a quilt for husband or sons.

I got hundreds of yards of properly stored 1970 vintage cottons at a garage sale once. Fabric was still on bolt, kept out of sun, and strong. Who is to tell me not to use it for lovely charity quilts and their backs?

It is up to each of us who use a variety of fabric to sort and determine what is a quality cotton of whatever vintage and would make a useful and lovely quilt. I got bags and bags from a previous quilter and went thru each piece to ensure it was useable. I like to sort and iron at the same time.

Let those who want LQS specific fabrics join their groups and those of us with more creativity and flexibility join their own.
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Old 06-15-2012, 04:29 AM
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Originally Posted by Maggiem View Post
Maybe this whole topic is a sensitive one for me, but I will not make a quilt to donate made of fabric I wouldn't use on a gift quilt. 'Charity' does not mean 'ugly, cheap, thrown together with whatever is left over, who cares'. I don't differentiate between types of receivers, known to me or strangers. I trly to learn something from every quilt I have the joy to make.

This being said, unless there was a really good reason for it, I don't think I would appreciate being told where to buy my fabric.
I feel the same way. I try to do my best on each & every quilt I make... the best fabric I can afford, the nicest pattern I can find, the best workmanship I can do. The end receipiant (SP?) doesn't figure in for me.
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Old 06-15-2012, 04:56 AM
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I question the dictating of where to purchase fabrics for anything --- as far as i know it is my dollars and my choice. I have been fortunate to get a bit of a discount for charitable work, but that is not the deciding factor where I purchase. That said, the type of fabrics for donation quilts depends on where it is going --- Children's Hospitals have specific requirements and I check before making. I have also found that cotton holds up well to children and animals and is washable. So, good quality cotton with a cotton batting --- in case of the unimaginable fire situation, cotton chars and falls away not melts into bodies. I also try to avoid using flannel for that reason. I remember using a quilt with an old wool blanket that was the batting to put out a fire when my son was at the exploring age. Thank God that the person who made the quilt used good quality (even if recycled) fabrics.
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