Skip to main content

Washing Ye Olde Cottons

Before I do anything with the very old piece of 19th-century patchwork, I needed to give it a bath:

Upfront disclaimer: I don't recommend washing very old cottons, especially if it's a historically important piece. The fabric processes of 140 years ago were very different from ours, and the fabric can easily disintegrate and/or dyes can bleed even during gentle hand washing. If you need to clean an old piece, consult with a quilt restoration expert or antique textile cleaning service first.

My patchwork piece felt strong enough to withstand immersion, and although it had some red in it (notorious for dye-bleeding in any era) I thought I'd risk giving it a brief soak in cold water with a mild detergent.

And the results:

I think the bath brightened it up nicely.

Comments

nightsmusic said…
Even I can see it in the pictures. Looks wonderful. I know I've always been a bit leery of washing things like that, but if you don't take the chance, you're working with dirty fabric and sooner or later, you'll want it clean. Better before you do all that work on it than to quilt it and then wash it and have it fall apart.

Popular posts from this blog

Downsizing

This was my fabric stash once I sorted everything -- 22 full bins. I spent a day taking out and boxing up what I could part with, with the goal of trying to reduce it by half, so I'd have 11 bins. I was very strict with myself, and removed everything that for one reason or another I was sure I wouldn't be able to use. This is what I ended up with -- 12 bins of fabric that I'm keeping. It's not quite half, but close enough. Half of what I took out went to a local quilter friend, a school and Goodwill. These four tightly-packed bins will be going to the local quilting guild once I make arrangements with them for a drop-off place. I am relieved and a little sad and now determined to control my impulses to thrift more fabric. I don't want to do this again, so until I use up six bins, I can't for any reason bring any new fabric into the house.

In Progress

I promised myself I would show you the good, bad and ugly of my cleaning this year. This is what it looks like when you dump thirty years' worth of stashed fabric on the floor -- and oy, what a pain in the butt to pick up again! This is what it looks like after it's been sorted, folded and placed in containers, which took me about a week. Now the hard part is to downsize my stash by at least half, I think (that's my goal, anyway.) I've already e-mailed the president of the local quilting guild, a local friend who is a quilter, and a public school art teacher I know to see if I can donate some of the excess to them. The rest will go to Goodwill. Already I've reduced my vintage textiles from two bins to one, and my scraps from three bins to one. It's probably the hardest clean-out I've done, which is why I saved it until last. I know I have too much fabric, more than I can use in my lifetime -- but at the same time, I love it. So I have to

Other Stashes

Along with clearing out the spare bedroom and tidying my office and our guest bedroom, I decided to reorganize some of my stashes. This is all the yarn I have on hand, sorted by color. It looks like a lot, but lately I've been using up a minimum of half a bin every month, so this is approximately a year's supply. All of my solid color cotton perle thread. I go through a lot of this every year, too. I need a container in which I can fit all of it together, but I haven't found the right one yet. I won't show you all of my fabric -- I'm still reorganizing this stash -- but I went through everything and donated two bins of fabric I won't need to the local quilter's guild.