Years ago when my kids were little, we would sit around the table after dinner with paper and pencil in hand and each of us would list three goals we wanted to accomplish in the coming year. I would then take away the slips of paper, seal it in an envelope and put it away for safe keeping until the following year. A few years ago I came across hidden secret goals (I guess we didn't open them one year and that tradition ended). The contents weren't shocking or earth breaking news; wanting to run faster, getting higher scores at a gym meet, or reading more. Mine was about how many quilts I would finish.
My goal this year is to be better organized, especially with my Etsy shop. Better organization means a better shop.
Thinking about goals and being organized reminded me of an estate sale I went to this past fall. In a box filled with 1970'[s and 80's fabric was a metal index card box. Oh beating heart....are they treasured family recipes I can admire and adapt to my family? How clever they were hidden in fabric to guard these family treasures.
I am going to digress a moment .... to ask you to admire my new cutting board Santa brought me! Okay, back to the box now.
So my jaw hung a little when I opened it up to reveal it was stuffed with receipts and index cards.
with all the seamstresses 1970's, 80's quilting cotton purchases recorded with amount and yardage. I vaguely remember participating in the same activity and stopped when cotton soared to over $3 a yard. Could you imagine COTTON at $3.00! I then decided it was time not to have any evidence in the house of what I was spending on my "fabric habit".
Fabric record keeping wasn't limited to this seamstress either. At another sale, all the beautiful fine woven percale cotton yardage had sales slips tucked into each purchase or the original tags connected with a thread tack.
Beautiful organized fabrics from a well organized woman! |
I wonder if the fabric came from a household where sewing was done as a business and her accurate record keeping was a must with her potential customers? Possible theory...or she was an economist tracking the home sewing industry - probably not.
No mistake this fine percale is Quadriga Cloth produced by Ely and Walker. These calicoes are making a comeback to the quilting scene with Barbara Brackman's line of prints called Old Fashioned Calicoes for Moda. I remember these prints fondly as they were some of the first fabrics I used.
Regardless, if these women could be organized, so can I. Thank goodness January starts tomorrow and I can reform my ways, organize my sewing room and get working on a spread sheet.
Happy New Year Everyone!