I immediately thought of Debbie Caffrey when I read your post. I attended a lecture in 2006 that she called, "How to have it all." I prefer to subdivide my fabric AFTER I have cut into it. I would not slice large pieces of fabric into small pieces, just because...
Suenewlife wrote:
I've seen a couple of diagrams where you cut a fat quarter into useable shapes - like a couple of 2 1/2" strips, a 1 1/2" strip, some 5" squares, maybe a 9" or 10" square, until the entire fat quarter is cut into various pieces. The idea is that basically you would be making your own jelly rolls, layer cakes, etc. The pieces are stored by size, or by color, depending on how big your stash is, or what way is easier for the quilter to use. You are supposed to save time because you don't unfold the fat quarter, iron it, cut the couple of pieces that you need for a particular quilt, refold and store the fat quarter again, and repeat the whole process for the next quilt.
Has anyone tried this, and does it really save time? Or do you like having your fat quarters uncut, and the endless shapes that it would contain? I'm cutting 2 1/2" strips out of many fabric right now for a big project, and I'm wondering if I should go ahead and cut up the remainder of what's left of the fat quarter.
Thanks,
Sue