The Fabric Haul
My Sew Expo trip is an excellent time to stock up on fabric, especially apparel fabric. I didn’t go nuts, but I did buy a few yards.
I found this sweater knit at a Walmart.
The Walmart remnant racks started out strong but have fizzled over the past year. When the stores do stock fabric, it’s just plain ugly and in colors I wouldn’t wear, so finding something like this is unusual. This sweater knit will become some kind of pullover for next winter.
I did some damage at the Quilting Bee in Spokane. I needed some yardage for the Tamarack Jacket—which I will be making up this weekend—and chose the black with dots. The gray will be the lining:
And, of course, I got the Yellow installment of the Tim Holtz Palette line. I skipped the Orange installment. Orange is not a color I use. I also got that fat quarter bundle at the bottom right, which I think is leftovers from a variety of previous Tim Holtz lines. They play nicely together, though, and I may have most of them in the stash.
I had a couple of gift cards and used them at Pacific Fabrics, where I indulged myself:
From left to right:
Three yards of red Kaufman Brussels Washer Linen, destined to be a summer dress.
Two yards of a new Fableism print for a woven top.
Two yards of Anna Maria for Free Spirit rayon woven, also for a top.
Two yards of a Cloud 9 rayon woven for a top.
One yard of Rifle and Paper canvas from the Alice in Wonderland line for either a bag or an apron.
I definitely had a red and blue vibe going here.
I’ll post photos of my Sew Expo purchases tomorrow.
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Yesterday was an errand-running day, so I stopped in at Joann Fabrics. Our store is much cleaner and less of a free-for-all than the stores in Seattle. The patterns were still in the drawers and all $1.99 (or $4.99 for the Vogue patterns). I wonder if the decision to pull all the patterns from the drawers and put them in boxes at 30% off was a Seattle-area decision made by someone who knows nothing about sewing, in which case those stores are going to be sitting on disorganized mountains of patterns at the end of the liquidation. Dumb.
I stocked up on some elastic and other notions. I did not recognize any of the employees, which makes me wonder if the ones who were working there jumped ship—who could blame them?—and the store is being staffed by Great American employees.
I’ve seen lots of comments around the internet that the discounts are less than expected. I’m not surprised that things aren’t at fire sale prices yet. GA paid a chunk of money for the opportunity to oversee the liquidation. They are looking for a return on that investment and counting on a certain level of panic buying. Someone on the Joann subreddit commented that prices won’t start coming down until traffic slows in the stores.
I’ve said this before and it’s still true. Sewing—and most especially quilting—is predominantly a wealthy retired white woman hobby. That certainly was the demographic of attendees at Sew Expo. I am curious to see how the death of Joanns affects the quilting industry going forward. This article on the Modern Retail website does a fairly good postmortem and quotes Abby Glassenberg, head of the Craft Industry Alliance.