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Help! How Do I Figure Out What a Fabric is Made From?

Do you ever buy fabrics online and flea markets? What about your non-quilting friends, do they ever offer to give you excess fabrics? Have you received fabrics in a swap that you're just not sure about? Unless you ly recognize fabrics as quilting cottons, there's no way of knowing their fiber content without performing a few tests.

One way to identify fabric content is to perform a fabric burn test, an easy way to help you determine if a fabric is 100-percent cotton -- or something else. Be sure to perform the burn test outside on a day that's not windy, or in a well ventilated area inside.

Burn Test Supplies

Perform the Fabric Burn Test

  1. Cut small swatches of each fabric you want to test. Two-inch squares are fine.
  2. Place a swatch in your fireproof container and ignite a corner of the fabric.
  3. Pay attention to the odor of the smoke.
    • Cotton smells like burning paper.
    • An odor similar to burning hair or feathers indicates wool or silk fibers, but silk doesn't always burn as easily as wool.
    • A darkish plume of smoke that smells like chemicals or burning plastic probably means the fabric is a cotton/polyester blend.
  4. Examine the ashes after they've cooled.
    • Cotton ashes are soft and fine. They turn to dust when touched.
    • Black, brittle remnants that crush between your fingers indicate wool.
    • Hard lumps are the remains of melted synthetic fibers.
  5. Take one more step. Unravel a clump of threads from another small swatch of the fabric. Hold the clump with tweezers and slowly move a small flame towards the clump.
    • Cotton fibers ignite as the flame draws near.
    • Synthetic fibers curl away from the heat and tend to melt.

To see exactly how each type of fabric reacts, do experimental burn tests on fabrics you know are made from cotton, cotton/polyester blends, wool and other fibers.

Fabrics Sometimes Mistaken for Cotton

If You Don't Think the Fabric is Cotton

Most of us make the majority of our quilts with 100-percent cotton fabrics, but there's no rule that you must sew with one type of fabric or another. Go ahead and use a fabric if you like it, but do try to determine what type of fabric it is so that you'll know how to care for the quilt when it's finished.

One bit of advice, most quilt block and fabric swaps do require that you use all-cotton fabrics. Reserve fabrics made from other materials for your own use or for swaps that allow variations

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Shipping Terms

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Only Shipping BY China?Post Air Mail or? or Cukoo Express.

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Please send us an email BEFORE your payment if you wish to change shipping address.

China?Post Air Mail takes about 10-22 business days.

Cukoo Express? takes about 5-12 business days.

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The shipping time during Holiday Season (Christmas, Chinese New Year etc) could be longer than usual time. Please add another 5-10 days as a delay.

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Returns Term

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In case you received a defective item, the customer has up to 3 days from date of receipt to request for refund or exchange for a new one.

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