These pieced sections (some quilted, some scribed with climate crisis deniers’ words) might belong together.
This effort came after reading Jude’s post this morning. Imagine what might happen after I Listen.
These pieced sections (some quilted, some scribed with climate crisis deniers’ words) might belong together.
This effort came after reading Jude’s post this morning. Imagine what might happen after I Listen.
You might be shocked to know that this disarray of fabric is AFTER giving away about 25 LARGE bags of fabric over the course of the last two years. Furthermore, the picture above shows only three of six shelves. Further, there are seven dressers with their drawers full and bins on the floor!!
DONE – FIXED. So, I couldn’t post the little felt disk photo that I took with my phone a little while ago right from flickr, which is what I wanted to do — Instead, here is a picture of a tray from the basement, which I shot a few days ago.
Even WITH my tolerance at an all time low, I see this dead baby and wince. What killed it, I wonder? How can I throw it out? Even as it begins to stink, I can’t bring myself to dispose of the tiny body, curled into death… so vulnerable, so small!
I have big bins sorted by color (eg. yellow, pales, blues, greens) and others that capture fabric types (eg. linen, upholstery, denim, gauze/nets/tulle) (actually a lot of my tulle and years-worth of collected onion-bag-netting live in a plastic, huge former pretzel jar). I also maintain smaller boxes labeled by subject matter, such as:
** small geometrics;
** tropical prints (mostly palm leaf shapes, which I adore);
** creatures;
** farm (chickens, sunflowers, cheery ginghams);
** WIPs (currently I have a small suitcase for Global Warming fabrics; a basket for Ghost House);
** I Spy (prints with subjects suitable for children’s blankets – things like lighthouses, trains, frogs, maps, chopsticks).
To name a few. Then there are drawers. In March of 2010, my studio flooded with four inches of water and I used the ‘opportunity’ to buy six IKEA dressers, replacing saw horse supports with STORAGE, and also inserting a couple under the table where previously there had only been laundry bins. Drawers are ALSO sorted, some by fabric type, others by how fabric was recently used, for example:
** Shirts — even though these could be sorted by color bin, I find it easiest to find them if they have their own drawer;
** Half-assembled little ‘sketch quilts’ along with landscape prints (you know, like the Capri pants with scenes of Paris?);
** Plaids and ticking;
** Felt scraps (actually there are TWO drawers of these and three large under-table bins)
** Silk scraps;
** Christmas fabrics (and two drawers of finished Christmas pillows);
** Christmas photo-transfers waiting for inclusion in a project;
** Sheers and gauze and PFD silk;
** Doll stuff.
To name a few. And then there are the laundry bins. Here’s where things can get a little out of control. Laundry bins generally become catch-alls, in part because they are the links between upstairs/downstairs and stuff gets piled in. I have a bin for batting (and a milk crate for batting scraps); another bin full of large pieces of upholstery fabric; another bin with recently-used or about-to-be-used teaching supplies. But then there are at least four more that should be gone through.
Precious scraps generally live in clementine boxes, which I love because they can be stacked like Lincoln Logs, and transport easily for an upstairs sewing session. I also spray painted the sides of some tray-like boxes from Costco, and labeled them. What’s in these trays doesn’t necessarily correspond to their labels anymore, but they hold things like strips cut for string quilting or binding; pressed scraps; fabric with words printed on them. I like ‘trays’ because they can be slid into the shelving above a fabric bin.
I just went to the cellar to take some pictures and I have to say – it is TIME to put some effort into sorting (again!). Wow.
But here’s progress – I finally took the time (less than five minutes) to learn how to single space on wordpress between hard returns!! Yes, progress. (Part of why I wanted to make a few lists here).