I hate to be the bearer of bad news but we quilters are doing such a good job of making quilts for children that some of the charities have more than they can use. Once you give it to the charity, they can do with it as they see fit, which includes selling them so they have funds for things they need as well as hanging them on the wall to beautify the place.
My daughter has appointments at one of the places that gets donated quilts and they have way more than they need and not all of them are age appropriate so the counselor has a huge stack in her office waiting and a second stack looking for homes. She has passed some on to another agency hoping they can be used there. She feels really bad that she can't use all of them after "someone cared so much to make them."
We quilters can be generous to a fault, we want to do so much and want to be appreciated as well for our efforts but sometimes we have overwhelmed the people we are trying to help. The counselor I talked with said she doesn't need more quilts but she does have a "wish list" of things that could help her clients that most people wouldn't even think of and she wished she could re direct the generosity towards her needs.
I know we all want our quilts to wrap some child with the love we put into them. The charities want that too but are sometimes overwhelmed by our good deeds. Ronald McDonald house probably has the policy to accept all quilts with smiles and then they try to do the best they can with them.
It's not a ideal situation and everyone really means well.