Quilt Along #27 – How to Store Your Quilts

LeahDay

Leah Day has been teaching online since 2009. She's the creator of the Free Motion Quilting Project, a blog filled with thousands of quilting tutorial videos. Leah has written several books including 365 Free Motion Quilting Designs, Explore Walking Foot Quilting with Leah Day, and Mally the Maker and the Queen in the Quilt.

13 Responses

  1. Wow most excellent noodle tip. I'm definitely going to give it a try.
    Have a great day.
    Always, Queenie

  2. Ms MoomMist says:

    Super idea, thank you Leah Day!

  3. I hope Harry comes back to you quickly and in a good, functioning state. It's amazing how much life can be interrupted by a malfunctioning computer.

  4. Linda says:

    Leah, thanks so much for the tip on the direction of rolling on the tube. I've been storing my landscape quilts rolled on large mailing tubes with cheap king-size pillowcases for protective sleeves, but it never occurred to me that it would be better to roll them from top to bottom or vice versa–instead of rolling them from side to side! This week I'll take my remaining landscape quilts out of storage and re-roll any that are rolled from side to side. Thanks so much!

  5. This is great! I don't have a need for that yet…but I will.

  6. Jayardi says:

    • • • Is this the way you send them to shows? Can you elaborate on your mailing method, please?

  7. it a really great idea but one thing concerns me. im wondering if the pool noodle should be completely sealed in archival plastic of some sort to stop any chemical leeching from the foam stuff they use to make it. this is the scrapbooker coming out in me lol. it is a much better way than the way i currently store my quilts which is in acid free tissue paper, rolled and then a white sheet wrapped around that. not so good when y ou go to get a quilt down and the rest come to join in lol.

  8. sharidan says:

    Leah – thank you so much for an excellent tutorial. Do you prewash the fabric for both the noodle and quilt sleeve? Also, do you roll the quilt in with the back on top or visa versa? I find when unrolling the quilt after storing for a while that it curls inward, therefore I have considered rolling it opposite but then the front is exposed to the sleeve for storage. I appreciate your thoughts.

  9. Liz I. says:

    To make it easy to slip the outer fabric cover over the rolled up quilt, just slip a plastic bag over the quilt roll, keeping the sealed bottom of the plastic bag at the top of the quilt roll. Then, slip the cloth fabric tube onto the quilt roll, starting at the bottom of the roll. The plastic will help the fabric cover slide on easily and all you have to do is pull the plastic bag off once the cover is in place.

    I use this same method to put tight slipcover cushion covers back on the cushions on my furniture.

  10. Being a professional workroom for interior designers, I have multitudes of fabric tubes every month. I take them to my guild meetings and basicly do the same thing. No cost and I add a layer of poly batting around the tube first then muslin. Then there is no chance of leaching from the plain cardboard and they are stiff so stand up better in a closet. Look in your local phone book for drapery workrooms and ask if they will give you tubes, thousands end up in the dumpster every month…

  11. I store my quilts much the same way as you do. To help identify the quilt, I insert a band 4 or 5 in. Wide in my tube, with a fabric used in the quilt or back. I also write with a Sharpie or Pigma on the tube with Title, year completed, size ( so I don't need to open to measure), my name and email address.

  12. Deb says:

    Leah Day, you are one smart cookie! Thanks for this great idea. I had my Horizon in for service, turns out my dealer is a BIG fan of yours, as am I. He is amazed that you had worn that machine part out on your Horizon a while back. He says he puts your videos on his computer at the shop to start up conversations with customers. Hey that's poteneial sales you should get commission!
    Best, Deb in CA

  13. Unknown says:

    Seems that if you put a casing in the second end of the tube cover with a ribbon drawstring instead of sewing it shut you could take the tube cover off to wash if necessary. Is there a reason to sew it shut instead of making it like a huge wine bottle cover?

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