lovetriangle: (Mucha 2)
lovetriangle ([personal profile] lovetriangle) wrote2007-01-11 01:17 pm

Judging fabric shops...

Ok. When I walk in to a fabric shop and the 45" silk dupioni is on SALE at $24.99, it's time to walk out again. AND they're less than 20 minutes from the downtown fabric district. You'd think a shop with a name like Calico Corners would be a little more down-to-earth, but no. At least it wasn't spelled with K's...

It did get me thinking a little, though... I know year after year when we costumers chat about pet peeves or things we see, good and bad, synthetic or inappropriate fabrics pops up, and is usually answered by someone in a small town who says they only have access to Jo Ann's or Walmart and can't afford good silk or wool, which is in turn answered by "Use the internet! Cost is not an excuse for the wrong fabric when you can get the right fabrics cheap online." Blah blah blah, and so it goes, ad infinitum.

That got me thinking about my current fabric needs, current fabric access, and the road blocks that keep be from buying online right now.

1) Even having reasonable access to downtown LA does not make it convenient or practical to shop there when one considers traffic, parking and walking time.
2) Fabric shops I can now reach during my lunch time are the aforementioned Calico Corners and the WORST JoAnn's on earth.
3) Both CC and JA seem to think that silk dupioni is the most exotic fabric on earth, and price it at 2-6 times what I can get it for downtown. JA's has this problem with wool, too - WAYYYY overpriced for what they carry.
4) Let's face it, as scrummy as dupioni is, it's basically the bastard step-child of the silk fabric family being a cheap fabric to produce silk-wise. I like it, I use it, but it's not like getting my hands on a lovely silk twill, damask, satin or taffeta. It's constantly available in a dizzying array of colors, and Jo Ann's usually carries it, which tells you how cheap it is for being a silk.
5) Since dupioni became a popular fabric it's like an invading species problem - it's 10 times as hard to get silk that is NOT dupioni.
6) Color matching makes buying online difficult. It's great to find a deal on something online and buy it and get it and have it and be inspired to make the Perfect Dress(tm) with it, but once you have that initial fabric, trying to match or coordinate with all the problems of lighting, camera settings, monitors, etc., is next to impossible for most colors.
7) I am impatient and impulsive and don't want to pay for nor wait for swatches, only to find that the one they sent me that will work has sold out.

In short, or sort of, I am in a fabric pickle at my new job with no decent fabric shops nearby and no time to hit downtown. All fabric I need for every project awaiting fabric has to be matched to another fabric I already have. I finally have true sympathy and understanding for those of you out there who's only resources are Jo Ann's or Walmart and my heart breaks for you.

[identity profile] christylee.livejournal.com 2007-01-11 10:26 pm (UTC)(link)
My fabric limitations are self imposed. I start a project with a budget and I try my best to stick with it. Most often such sacrifices are usually synth over silk or maybe not The color I wanted. Example: I budgeted $100 for my Florentine, accessories an all. It is mostly synth/ mystery fabric but I feel it looks the part.

By and large I tend to be overly practical and can't bring myself to spend so much for silk or any fabric when the bargain bin is damn close. There are few times when I have paid full price for fabric. I tend to be a sucker for the bargain bins tho. Good scrounging can find you some really nice fabric really cheap! My Victorian walking dress budget is $200. So far so good. Cotton. ~L~

[identity profile] love3angle.livejournal.com 2007-01-12 12:01 am (UTC)(link)
What is becoming astonishing to me is that anything can be made at all, LOL! I am a bargain hunter and have pretty good fabric mojo. I rarely pay more than $10/yd for anything and usually less than $5 (we'll just ignore that Venetian dress for a moment - I just HAD to have THAT fabric) and I haven't used non-natural fibers in years.

But now that I have time/location restrictions I didn't have before I can't even FIND what I need and if I do find something close it's not a price I'm used to paying. It can be very frustrating. I'm just going to have to bitethe bullet, take a 2-hour lunch, and hit downtown where I know I'll find what I need at a price I'm willing to pay. I just miss the convenience of my old work to some good fabric stores...

mope mope mope

[identity profile] suededsilk.livejournal.com 2007-01-12 01:13 am (UTC)(link)
Hope you don't mind a comment from a sometime reader of your LJ. (Found you through jennylafleur, laurenmonkey, and lots of others! :) I just wanted to say that I feel your pain on the fabric issue. I once visited a Calico Corners in high hopes that it would have something nice at even nicer prices. You can picture my sticker shock...

I loathe to pay more than $5 or so ($8-10 if I'm splurging) for fabric since costuming requires *so much* of it and then you need linings, trim, etc. So for me to find a non-synthetic, appropriate fabric at a price I can afford requires much searching, comparing, and then, pouncing when I find a good deal. :)

As a side note, every winter (aka right now), JA has nice sales on fall suitings. Right now, mine has several shades of wool gabardine and crepe (none of which, naturally, I want right now), 60% off - I think the sale may continue a couple weeks longer if you want to check it out.

[identity profile] peggyelizabeth.livejournal.com 2007-01-12 04:15 am (UTC)(link)
ah, yes. Calico Corners, where you'd die of shock at actually finding calico. I used some fabric from there for a kirtle panel & sleeves for my mom, but it was 75% off, so it make it almost reasonable.

I'm lucky (cursed?) enough to have been introduced to Minnesota's version of a garment district, SR Harris, as a kid, so I cringe at the thought of forking over money for fabric that's not 50% or more off.

[identity profile] tayloropolis.livejournal.com 2007-01-12 03:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I've had to totally accept the fact that the only fabric I can get is online. It sucks, too, because of the aforementioned swatch frustrations, but other than that, I'm screwed. We dont' even have a joann's here! And I live in a freakin' city! I'm super jealous that you live even reasonably close to the Fabric District, which I would kill someone to go to. hmmm...no solution there, just though I'd agree with your costuming frustrations.

[identity profile] laurenmonkey.livejournal.com 2007-01-12 04:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, that sucks :(
Ditto on the buying fabric online. I think I'll only buy plain fabrics that don't need to match anything online- and even then it's cheaper to get it in the garment district sometimes. But it is a pain in the butt to get down there, which is why I do the seasonal go up and get stuff run, but then I invariably end up forgetting something.
And I like shantung and dupioni. It's cheap and silk and has lots of pretty colors- besides, making a huge dress out of silk satin or taffeta, as glorious as it sounds, seems like it would be ridiculously expensive. Worth it, yes, but expensive.
Our Joann doesn't even carry silk or 100% wool down here :(

Fabric shopping

[identity profile] fitchwitch.livejournal.com 2007-01-12 07:29 pm (UTC)(link)
I know the feeling. I was shopping for fabric last February in the NYC garment district. Luckily, I'm only a bus trip away, but still only get there an average of once a year. I met a man who was buying fabric for a show. He said that when he had a job costuming in Florida they budgeted in the cost of a trip to NYC in order to get all the fabric and trims they needed!

Even though I'm in the New York/New Jersey area, there really isn't anything to compare with hitting NYC for fabric. Not just for the prices, but also for the variety.

[identity profile] seekatesew.livejournal.com 2007-01-14 02:27 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, Joann Fabrics, aka Fabric Hell (TM sewgeeky). Where the only silk is dupioni, and where one of the salesladies tried to tell me that linen was from some sort of animal, "like wool". At least they sometimes carry 100% linen, although you have to dig for it.