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Bar Stool Fabrics
Children's Quilts from the 19th Century
Scissors, The Cutting Edge
Tour of Vintage Quilts
Lampshades - Creating Shades of Your Own Style
Finding Quilting Fabric Squares
Hand Printed Tropical Fabrics
A Guide To Slipcover Fabrics
What are Microfibers, Anyway?
Antimicrobial Treatments
Get Rid of Fabric Stains
Using Slipcovers
Everything Labels
How to clean and maintain upholstery
Woven Clothing Labels say it With Style
Textile Tobacco Inserts and Premiums used in American Quilts
Patterns for Plus Size Children
Sewing Shortcuts are Boon to Seamstresses Short on Time!
Clothing Can Create an Optical Illusion - Good or bad!
Success With Plaids and Stripes
The Clothesline - A Book Review
Sewing With Leather and Suede
Sewing Room Salvage - Save and Sew!
Do It Yourself Sewing Machine Repair
How Do You Know If You're Using The Right Needle?
Album Quilts: a Look At These Fascinating Signature Quilts
8 Steps to Optimize Your Sewing Time
Internet Scams and Fraud
It's a Mad Pad Fab Clad Fake Fur World
Searching for Gweneviere
Blue Star Service Banners
Name Colorology
American quilts of the 19th Century
Quilt Patterns
Charm Quilts
TheSloperLady - Articles
Passions for Fabric and Travel
Is cloth stronger when it is wet?
Fire Retardants: An Advantageous Solution to Fire Protection
Making Draperies
Fabric - Save, Repair, Remodel, or Let Go Polarfleece®
Make It Yourself With Wool - 2002 Nationals
Wool, The Versatile Fabric - Plus a Virtual Style Show! By: Judith, Fabrics.net
Hawaiian
Quilting - A trip to Paradise! By: Judith, Fabrics.net
Fabric Glossary
and Fabric Reference, Mary Humphries; revised 1999: A Book Review
New Products for 2000
Estimating Yardage - Upholstery By: Mervil H
Knutson - Mervs Upholstery
Fabric Definitions and Pronunciations
Shortening Sleeves
Determining the right side of fabric
Cotton Quality and Pricing
Boning for Costume, Evening and Bridal Wear
Color Wisdom and Insights
Back to School - Sewing for Children
Fiber-Etch
More Q & A on Soaps and Detergents!
"Synthetic Surfactant or Soap?"
Sewing Outdoor Gear
Voir Couture
Tartan Myths and Legends |
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Wisdom From the Professionals
A collection of Articles
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FINDING QUILTING FABRIC SQUARES
By BUD
http://store.fabrics-textiles.com
Quilting fabrics can be found anywhere. You can use old clothes and other fabric items to make the patches of the quilt. You can even use old stuffed animals as quilting fabrics for quilts that might remind you of your childhood. These are great places to find quilting fabric, but sometimes you might want to make a quilt that doesn't use older material as the quilting fabric. If you'd like to make a quilt out of brand new quilting fabrics, then you still have many options to choose from. Lots of retail stores sell fabric that you can use for your next quilt. Many fabric stores even sell quilting fabric squares that you can use.
Many of the quilting fabric squares that you find at fabric stores will come in sets that are called charm packs. These charm packs work together to make a whole quilt. Sometimes the quilting fabric squares are related by color, and sometimes they have a common theme that helps pull all of the squares in the quilt together.
Some of the themes that can be found in the charm pack quilting fabrics are fairy tales, flowers, cartoon characters, romance, and holidays. Often the fairy tale quilting fabric charm packs will use each panel to tell one piece of the story. You might be able to find many of the traditional European fairy tales that were made popular by the Brothers Grimm, and you can also find many Asian fairy tales that American quilt makers may not be familiar with. Many of these Asian fairy tales are depicted in the quilting fabric squares using the sparse aesthetic qualities that are popular in Japan, China, and many other Asian countries.
Dick and Jane are popular cartoon characters that have several of their own quilting fabric charm packs. These squares show a young girl and boy participating in idealized childhood activities, such as riding bikes, playing on a see-saw, and holding stuffed animals. Dick and Jane are popular characters from the basal readers written by Zema Sharp from the 1930s to the 1970s. You might also be able to find less traditional cartoon characters that you can use as quilting fabric too. When you're shopping online and at retail stores for quilting fabrics, you might want to keep in mind the cartoon characters that your children like, or even some of the characters that you enjoyed in your childhood.
Regardless of whether you decide to pull your quilting fabrics from old items around the house, or you decide to purchase new quilting fabric squares that come in charm packs, making your own quilt is a rewarding experience. Often, charm packs don't include all of the quilting fabric that you need for the entire quilt. It depends on the size of the quilt that you want to make. So using charm packs for your source of quilting fabric doesn't mean that you don't have plenty of creative license. You can use any kind of other fabrics that you'd like to use in the construction of the quilt. The charm pack quilting fabrics are there to create a theme, to pull the quilt together, but that doesn't mean that you can't use your own taste and individual personality when you're making the quilt.
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About the author:
BUD is a fabric expert and fabric sourcer / supplier / vendor whose company, Atlantis Fabrics Fabrics-textiles.com, offers fabrics like patchwork madras, organic cotton, madras, cotton prints, silk fabrics, linen, jute, bamboo, knits and all kinds of fabrics, sourced directly from their own warehouse in India, and available right here online at http://store.fabrics-textiles.com.
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