Leftover Craft Sale
#1
Power Poster
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Texas
Posts: 16,560
Leftover Craft Sale
Been invited to this kind of sale--never done this so it should be interesting. Along with fabric, I have lot of other sewing items. A few questions, please. On some of my fabrics I will never use ( why did I buy that ? ) I have as much as 5 yards or more of some prints, 4 yards of another, etc. Should I leave the fabric as a whole piece or cut into 2 yards, 1 yard pieces, etc. ? At this time, do not think I will cut fat quarters or should I ? Should I leave fabric out or put in plastic bags with note on length and price ? Either way, I plan to price all items. The sale place will not have smoke food or animals so my fabrics will be fine. What is not sold, I will try again in the Fall with some of my craft sales. After those sales, some of the items will be donated. Yes, doing a semi destash sale. Thanks for any help !
#3
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
Posts: 12,930
I wouldn't put in plastic bags, and I also wouldn't cut the fabric. I would measure and pin the length to each fabric so the buyer knows how much is there.
Would you be able to cut at the sale? If so, you could have a sign that you will cut longer pieces to 1/2 yard or 1 yard increments on request. The cutting at the table slows everything down, plus it is easiest if all yardage is priced the same per yard, so you might want to skip that. I wouldn't put fabric in plastic bags because quilters like to "pet" fabric.
Think about how to organize the table. Perhaps longer pieces folded and stacked, with yardages pinned so people can read the yardage for each piece without taking apart the entire stack. If you have lots of this kind of fabric, perhaps color code each stack, or organize batiks in one stack, civil war in another.
Would you be able to cut at the sale? If so, you could have a sign that you will cut longer pieces to 1/2 yard or 1 yard increments on request. The cutting at the table slows everything down, plus it is easiest if all yardage is priced the same per yard, so you might want to skip that. I wouldn't put fabric in plastic bags because quilters like to "pet" fabric.
Think about how to organize the table. Perhaps longer pieces folded and stacked, with yardages pinned so people can read the yardage for each piece without taking apart the entire stack. If you have lots of this kind of fabric, perhaps color code each stack, or organize batiks in one stack, civil war in another.
#7
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Nebraska
Posts: 3,255
I think you would be better off not cutting, especially on your first go round of sales. I would be more likely to buy large pieces for backings, too, as others have said. If your prices are right, it will sell.
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