How to Pre-shrink Wool


wool swatches 001

I scored some wonderfully soft gray wool from Metro Textile during my visit to New York this past weekend (more about fabric shopping in a later post). Wool is one of those fun fabrics that can only be dry cleaned, since agitation and/or hot water causes it to felt when washed. But I wasn’t about to take my lovely two yards of furriness to the dry cleaners to be pre-shrunk for a price. Instead, I used a method that my hairdresser shared with my mom.

1. Take a large bed sheet and run it through the rinse/spin cycle in your washer so that the sheet will be damp, not soaking wet.
2. Lay the sheet out flat on a large, clean surface, like a counter or even the floor. Open up the yardage of wool and also lay it flat on top of the damp sheet.
3. Proceed to roll up the two layers like a jellyroll, making sure that the wool is completely rolled up in the damp sheet. Fold in any extra fabric from the sheet.
4. Place the bundle in a large plastic bag and twist it shut. Let the wool sit in the bag for approximately three days.
5. After day three, take the wool out from the bag and unroll the sheet. Lay the wool flat to dry, which will take a few hours depending on how much yardage you have.


wool-bag


Mine will be ready to go on Friday!

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NYC Fabric Stores?

I’ll be going to NYC this weekend and I’m looking forward to going to the Garment District to check out some fabric stores. Any recommendations as to which ones to go to? I guess I should note that I know all about Mood, and I’d like to visit other stores instead.

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Spoonflower!

How nifty! Now you can have the curtins you always wanted by designing your own fabric and having it printed via Spoonflower. Just upload your design and within a week, the fat quarter you ordered will be at your door. They have all sorts of tips and tutorials on how to go about designing your fabric swatch, so don’t think that you don’t have the ability to turn some kona cotton into a print worthy of Picasso.

The site is still in beta right now and is expected to roll out to the public by the end of the summer. I signed up for it yesterday and got an invite this morning, so it’s worth a shot to get on the list if you’re interested. You can also check out the designs made by other Spoonflower users on their flickr page.

I’m thinking some strawberry printed tea towels would look pretty rad in my kitchen.

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Fabric Delivery

Pretty much as soon as I was done writing my post from yesterday, UPS pulled up and dropped off my fabric from Gorgeous Fabrics!


I ordered a yard of this funky knit to make another drop-sleeve top like the one out of the Fandango fabric, but at 60″ wide, it seems like I could make something else since there would be so much extra fabric left over. I might try to find another top pattern when I go to JoAnn on Saturday. I still want the top to be work appropriate.

Which brings me to this beauty:


I knew I had to have it the minute I this Pucci-like print. “Buy me!” it screamed, but I had no idea what to do with it. I thought that maybe a flouncy blouse would do the trick, like Butterick 4659 (ViewD). But then when I unfolded the fabric, I realized just how big of a print the fabric is:

I’m afraid that when I make the above mentioned blouse, which has several pieces to it, the pattern will be lost. I mean it’s worth a shot, and heck I’ll get some kind of neat looking blouse out of it, but I’m still worried that the print is meant for something like lining a coat.

Any input?

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