scraps

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Scrap management

As I have mentioned before, I currently use our guest room as my sewing space.  It’s a little cramped with a big bed in there, but it works OK.

When I got my new sewing machine, though, I forced myself to do a major clean and re-organize to make it “worthy” of my fancy new purchase.

The bulk of my stash was previously in some open wire shelves, and while it was an OK solution, it was becoming a little too messy. The stacks were precarious, and larger pieces of yardage were stuck in the back until I practically forgot they were there.  Scraps were in a set of plastic drawers, organized by color.

Now, I’ve got my stash (basically anything from a scant fat quarter on up to several yards) nicely folded and in those drawers, organized by color.

Scrap/Stash Management

Aaahh, it makes me so happy.  I like that it is both easily visible and completely contained.  One drawer for reds and pinks, one for oranges and yellows, one green, one (stuffed to the brim) blue, one purple and white/multicolored prints, one brown/black/gray, and even a separate drawer for colored solids. (And yes, I had fun with my label-maker.)

Scrap/Stash Management

I used a 5.5″ wide piece of cardboard to fold everything from the scant fat quarters up to about 1/2 to maybe 3/4 yard.  The template was just the right size so that the fabric can be two-across, and is just shorter than the depth of the drawer.  Larger pieces were folded around my 6″ ruler and then folded in half, and tucked in the back. As you can see, the drawer itself is easy to pull completely out of the shelf and look at an entire color group, which is nice.

The old wire shelves have moved to the other side of the room, and now hold works in progress, and stacks of fabric that I have pulled for a particular project, as well as batting and other miscellaneous things.  Hopefully the “miscellaneous” category won’t get too out of control and the shelves won’t become a catch-all for everything I don’t feel like putting away.

Scrap/Stash Management

But my question for you, fellow fabric fiends, is how you organize your scraps (basically from maybe half of a fat quarter down to 2″ squares).  For the moment, I have moved mine into latching clear plastic boxes, also organized by color.  And it’s certainly a good start: again both visible and contained at the same time.

Scrap/Stash Management

But in talking to someone a week or two ago, I found that she actually cuts all of her scraps into uniform sizes and stores them that way.  Some 10″ squares, some 6″ squares, and on down the line.  On the one hand, the organization and neatness of it certainly has some appeal to me, over my tangled mass shoved in a box.  But it also makes me weirdly nervous. Cutting is just so… final. The one thing you really can’t un-do.  What would be the “right” sizes to cut?  What would simultaneously most useful and least wasteful?

So, an informal poll of my handful of readers: how do you store your scraps?  Are they in a big mess in a plastic bag? Sorted by color? Organized by size?  Do you cut them before storing, or just toss them in a box and figure it out later?

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Charlie

That’s right, it’s madness up in here! Two finishes in less than a week! Well, it makes sense, as these two babies were born less than a week apart.

My nephew, Charlie. My very first nephew. My brother’s son.  He was born last Wednesday, about 10 days ahead of schedule. I was already working on the quilt when I got the call, but obviously his arrival sped things up a bit.  I hope they like his quilt. Because if they don’t, I’m taking it back. Because I am in love with it.  It feels so “boy” without beating you over the head with BLUE and TRUCKS and STEREOTYPES!

Charlie

It all started with a fat quarter bundle of Robert Kaufmann’s Animal Party prints that I bought from an Etsy seller, ages ago. I bought it on a whim, thinking it would be great for a baby boy at some point. Lo and behold, the ultrasound revealed that my brother’s first child was, in fact, a boy. And my sister-in-law mentioned something about a jungle/animal/explorer theme.  Golden!

I was undecided on what to do with these prints for a long, long time. I toyed with a whole bunch of different ideas, and couldn’t settle on one that I liked. And then Ashley posted about the Spotted Squares quilt she’s working on, and I had my inspiration.

Charlie

I felt compelled to be somewhat organized about it, not totally improvisational. (Because, seriously, improvising takes time! I like to chain-piece, people!)  They are all 8″ (finished) blocks. There are two different sized center squares (2″ and 4″, finished). There are two different layouts (centered and off-center). And there are two styles (print/color borders and white borders).  I picked fabrics from my stash to coordinate with the prints I already had, sticking mostly with brown, green, blue, and orange.

Oh, and the back. I kind of love the back. As much, if not more, than the front. I have to remember to do an actual quilt like this. Maybe for my kids…

Charlie

I was also torn as to how to quilt it, as I seem to be on almost every quilt I make.  I didn’t want to quilt it too densely, that much I knew.  But I’m psyched with what I went with: straight horizontal and vertical lines at random intervals.  I love that it kind of works with the square-but-wonky style of the front. I marked the lines with a washable pen and my ruler to keep them as straight as I could.

Charlie

Binding is from Connecting Threads, their Riviera line, which is now discontinued and on major clearance (those circle/dots are still available in three different colors).

Charlie

Anyways, I’m thrilled that this one is done. And I can’t wait to deliver it in person on Saturday, when I fly to Chicago to meet my sweet new nephew. Hooray!

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Oh. Um. Hi there!

Holidays, travel, craziness. You know how it goes.

Anyways, I realized I never showed the other scrappy gift I made.  This one was a birthday gift for my husband, who tends to get tension headaches and loves heat packs on the back of his neck.

ricebag1

It’s a rice heat therapy bag with washable cover, and I found the tutorial at Sew, Mama, Sew.  Super easy, and I added an extra round of topstitching around the edges of the rice bag for a little more security.

ricebag2

Of course, when I made the second one, I realized that topstitching was a lot easier if I did the first three sides before I put the rice in the bag. Genius, here. And, speaking of being an idiot, I didn’t take a picture of the second one before I gave it to my aunt. But it was cream with green and purple scraps and really matched her decor. I swear.

Anyways, throw together a few today! It takes no time at all. Chuck that bag in the microwave for two minutes and you’ve got nice, toasty weight to put on that knot in your shoulder or tuck under the covers to keep your toes warm.

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Clearly, I’m in a bit of an obsessive phase with my sewing right now.  I’m constantly doing it, thinking about it, reading about it, and dreaming up new projects before I finish any of the old ones.  I’m hoping I can mellow it out into just a steady habit, instead of burning out and not touching my sewing machine for months on end (it has happened before).  In the meantime, I guess I’ll just try to be as productive as I can!

Take last night, for instance.  When I should have been in bed, I was having a little too much fun with an empty oatmeal can, some glue, and leftover fabric.

Pincushion and pin cup

Inspired by crazy mom quiltstutorial involving an empty tuna can, I decided I wanted to make a pincushion. I was annoyed at my magnetic one, which didn’t keep a hold on the pins the way I would have hoped.  I didn’t make it exactly as the tutorial suggests, but I mostly just remembered the rough idea and improvised.

I used a rubber band to guide where I wanted to cut the box, so it was about 2″ deep.  I cut some fabric about 5″ wide and 13.5″ long, a bit more than the circumference of the box.  Sewed it lengthwise with right sides together, turned it right side out and pressed it so it was around 2.5″ wide and two layers of fabric (so the Quaker logo wouldn’t show through.  I sewed the ends together, put a little glue on the box to help hold things in place, and slipped my little fabric ring over the outside.  I then took a 9″ square of fabric for the actual cushion part, but a big handful of polyfil in the middle, and pulled the corners around to the bottom.  I sewed a button in the middle, which had the added benefit of securing the corners on the bottom.  A little more glue, stuffed it into the box, and voila!

Pincushion and pin cup

Oh. Ahem.  That second thing next to the pincushion… well… obviously I needed somewhere to put my safety pins, too. Right? That’s normal…

Cut out the other end of the box, took another scrap of the red fabric, sewed a button in the middle to secure it to the bottom of the cut-out box. [With the pins in the box, of course, you can't see the button. But it's cute, trust me.]  Glued down the inside corners, the sides, and folded it over the top of the cut box.  Then same deal with the outside sleeve to cover it.

Pincushion and pin cup

Obsessive, much?  Yeah, probably.  Do I wish I had gone to bed earlier last night?  Definitely.  But they’re super cute, and now I have a better containment solution for my pins.

Sigh. I’m going over the deep end, aren’t I?

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