Here's an overview of ways to cut up your scrap fabrics. Begin by sorting them into colors and styles. Styles are such things as flannel, batik, or screenprinted cotton. Now begin to cut them into the following listed sizes according to what you like to work with. Use gallon plastic storage bags to store the various sizes and colors. I have listed commercial patterns that are scrap oriented which you can use with these scraps. Sometimes you need a background fabric to pull all the fabrics together. You decide how small the piece needs to be before you throw it away! NO guilt! Remember it's spring and birdies like bits of color to put in their nests. Place scraps in an onion bag, hang it up outside and let them pull out the bits to feather their nests.
Cutting up your scraps: common sizes
• Squares: 2″, 2 ½″, 3″, 3 ½″, 4″, 4½″, 5″, 6″, 10″
• Strips: 1 ¼″, 1 ½″, 2″, 2 ½″, 3″, 3½″
• To make flying geese from squares and rectangles:
1. 3 ½″ x 6½″ rectangles and 3 ½″ squares
2. 2 ½″ x 4 ½″ rectangles and 2 ½″ squares
Commercial patterns which use scraps and the sizes needed
• Four Square Farmhouse—strips of 4 ½″, 3″, 2″
• I Can’t Believe it’s a Beginner--3½″ and 6″ squares,
• Braids on Parade—2 ½″ strips
• Cabin Fever-- 2½″ and 3½″ squares
• Modern Thinking--1½″ and 2½″ strips
• Whirlin’--1½″ strips
• Cure for a Bad Day-- 2″ strips
• Partial to 4’s—1 ½″ and 3″ squares, 2″ strips
• Which Way Do I go?—3 ½″ squares, 3½″ x 6 ½″ rectangles
• Any jelly roll (2 ½″ strips), charms (5″ squares) or layer cake (10″) book or pattern
Ideas for storage:
Plastic zip seal gallon bags labeled with sizes
Shoe, Photo or clear boxes
Stacked drawers on wheels—one for strips in lights and darks
--one for squares of different sizes
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