I didn’t get back to you about my weekend of super organisation a while back and my snazzy new label maker. I had promised to post some photo’s of my fabric shelves and now that I’m getting more confident with Photo Shop it’s all getting a lot easier.
As you know I’m a great fan of the Smithsonian fabrics which RJR released quite a few years ago. Most of my Smithsonian fabrics I’ve kept from all those years ago and they are still some of my most favourite…I can’t imagine I’ll ever tire of them. I keep them separate from my other fabrics, I don’t know why I do…I just do. Maybe because it makes them easier to be admired and of course they just go so well with each other.
However, about a third of my Smithsonian fabrics I bought about 5 years after they were released here in Australia and I found them in New Zealand, just in a small town’s quilt shop. There were still bolts left and so I was able to pick up a bit of meterage. And some I bought online just a couple of months ago on reproductionfabrics.com so it pays to keep looking.
You also know how crazy I go over 1800s repro fabrics and after several years of studying Quilt History I have a developed a keen eye for the different styles of fabrics and where they fit into the time line of fabric production. So I stack Turkey Reds, Indigos, Cheddars, Chrome Yellows and Poison Greens separately from Reds, Blues, Orange etc.
I don’t use much green in my quilts…just not a fave colour so my regular green stack is hardly worth photographing… but I do have a reasonable stack of Indigos and I’m always on the lookout for Prussian Blues, good ones are hard to get. Dyeing of Prussian Blue dates back to the early 1830s but was popular in quiltmaking and clothing in the 1840s and 50s.
And this last photo shows one of my much loved stacks of French Fabric. I have two stacks, one for French fabric I have bought or aquired over the years and the other is this stack…
Last year I visited Provence and was able to go to Les Olivades wharehouse/shop and showroom in St. Etienne du Gres. They are reproducing fabric in the Indienne Style produced in Marseilles in the mid 17th century and are well worth the visit, either in person or online.
My DH and I drove half way across the bottom of France for most of the day (we somewhat underestimated the distance involved) and we didn’t arrive in St. Etienne du Gres until 4pm even though we had left ‘home’ in the Midi Pyrenees at 8.30am, but of course the day did include the obligatory 2hr French lunch!!
I’m so glad to have been able to purchase some of these gorgeous fabrics that I keep them in their own stack…I have lots of ideas about what I want to do with them but I haven’t settled on one idea yet so for now they just remind of an enjoyable but long day out (we got home at 1am but had also managed ‘to squeeze in’ a trip to Pont du Gard at sunset…beautiful)
’til soon,
thanks for visiting…
oh my god! i love how neat you’ve become… looks just like a shop – but bette! stacked high with all gorgeous fabrics, no eye spys here!
well done – and can i hire you for my place please?!
Thanks Rose, yes you can hire me to come to your place…I’ll bring the label maker, you do the coffee (coffee is my fee)
thanks for subscribing too xx
catch you soon.
OH my heart just started beating like crazy when I saw your piles of fabrics
ah yes one can never have enough reproduction fabrics…
turkey reds, poison greens and chrome/cheddars are my favorites!
those prussian blues are amazing!
I am always on the look out for older fabrics, too bad I didn’t collect when they first started coming out.
Kathie
ok….I have now seen the result of some silly person giving Margaret a label maker…..what the photos show, is nothing like what you see in person, everything in her sewing room has been labeled within an inch of its life!! Even the poor desk has labels!!, While I am envious of the fabric stash, I would have that all messed up in about 10 seconds flat!!
Hey you really got beautiful collection of fabrics… the turkey red and Prussian blue ones are really good one… and you have organized them very well..