Posts Tagged ‘quilting fabric’

End of an Era

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

factory_obama

Sads news. The Cranston Print Works plant has closed its doors, so cotton fabric for quilting is no longer made in the U.S.

If you’ve ever been on a tour of the plant you’ll know how amazing it is to see all of the steps involved. We visited about 5 years ago and shot a show. (For Friends in the Bee–you can watch it on QNNtv.com) I came away with a new appreciation for fabric, and befuddled as to how it can sell for what it does. Just following yardage through the production process was exhausting!

I’m a native of Rhode Island, so it hits home for me even more that this piece of our history is now just that: history. The mills in New England were where the industrial revolution happened. This was the last of that amazing time in our history that brought people in from the farms to a new way of life. A testament to human ingenuity. And made goods both available and affordable. One thing for sure: Times do keep changing.  Read the whole story.

~Jodie

Hooray for Spoonflower!

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

I don’t know when I have last been so excited. I arrived home from Des Moines to find the package I had been anticipating from an online company called Spoonflower. To say that I tore into it is an understatement.

But let me start at the beginning.

Two weeks ago I squeezed some time out of my day to use my Sunbonnet Sue Rubber Duckie designs to create designs to be printed on fabric. I had heard about Spoonflower over a month before, and was invited to participate in their beta stage. I simply had to try it. I’ve been using Corel Draw for years, so I created a design to fit yardage for duckie cheater cloth and possible border designs. My design spans an entire yard; most designs can be tiled, so you only need a small part of the design for the final yardage. (There’s lots of helpful info on the Spoonflower site to explain all of this.)

I then logged into Spoonflower, uploaded the TIFF file I had saved in Corel Draw, and paid for my yardage. Two yards for $36 plus $3 shipping. A deal!

Isn’t this amazing how it turned out? And best yet, it is printed on high quality 100% Kona® cotton from Robert Kaufman Fabrics.

To see other fabrics Spoonflower designers have created go to their Explore function and click your way through, or visit the Flickr site. I’m blown away by the designs I see! The idea is that someday we can buy other people’s yardage.

Spoonflower changes everything. Designers are having their fabric designs printed and then are sewing the fabric up into true original pieces. I’m excited about what this means for books and patterns. Oh so Web 2.0, Spoonflower makes anyone a fabric designer. It’s a beautiful world!

~Jodie