To the uninitiated, the collection of fabrics, the raw materials of patchwork, is called a ‘stash’, and this paragraph may not seem to have anything to do with a fabric stash, but please stay with me.…I’ve always been fascinated by the erosion/deposition cycle of landscape, and I’ve come to see it as a metaphor for a human life. From the very beginning of The Earth, volcanism, wind, water and temperature change have acted on the earth’s surface in a never ending constant cycle, usually producing change so slowly that we barely notice it happening around us. A human undergoes change all his life, too: dramatic, rapid and obvious in youth, but more gradual and frequently unnoticed by family and surrounding community as the person ages.
Temporarily living in the USA in 1988 and having no work visa, I decided I’d study and learn to make traditional geometric patchwork. I signed on to classes and of course needed to buy some suitable fabric to use in that class. I began with the Flying Geese pattern, in a whole day class by Blanche Young.

Really enthused over it all, I joined the local Arapahoe County Quilters Guild and a wonderful quilting bee, the Friday Morning Block Party and those involvements increased my rate of fabric buying:- there were monthly block exchanges and challenges, and when bee members traveled anywhere we always looked for and bought a ‘souvenir’ fabric for ourselves, buying enough to to be able to give a fat 1/4 of it to bee members when we got back. Just as they say you shouldn’t visit the supermarket when you’re hungry, we all know you shouldn’t shop for fabric when you’ve more than enough time to browse the shop … and whether you’re a maker of traditional or non-traditional quilted textiles, an essential part of the whole quilt making process is selecting those fabrics you need/want from the array of colours and prints available in quilt and general fabric shops.
Early quilted recycled textiles have been recorded in many cultures, not just the north American and European ones we commonly associate with ‘quilting’ and many of those could have had bedding uses. The earliest reference I found was from Egypt 3500+ years ago. I personally saw in an exhibition on the innovations of the peoples of The Steppe, a fragment of quilted layered fabric dated to around 300 AD from somewhere in China, thought to have been used between a saddle and a horse. All of them have in common being made from layers of fabric salvaged from worn out garments and household linens once they were beyond repair. In the past decade or so this recycling aspect of quilt making art has again become important as a fashionable trend with a politically correct feel-good vibe, along with the money saving potential it has always had.
Among quilters whose studios have featured in magazine articles, or some makers I’ve known well enough to have been in their homes or studios, I’ve seen some incredible, huge, fabric stashes. Think walk-in wardrobes and dressing rooms filled with enough fabric to stock a reasonable shop – all folded and colour coded, stacked floor to ceiling on deep shelves. I’ve seen some double-door built-in wardrobes full of plastic tubs of fabric piled from from floor to ceiling. I’ve seen heaps of cartons full – and just plain heaps of fabric piled up everywhere in true hoarder fashion. I claim that my own peripatetic history coupled with my make-do or innovate attitude honed by 20 years of Outback living has had much to do with only ever having a modest fabric stash myself.
In the last year, I’ve been developing a real interest in 3D works, partly prompted by discovering a long forgotten 3D work in a package sitting on my shelf here for years. Following a talk I gave the SAQA 3D Special Interest Group a few months ago, I became more interested in something from my embroidery past – stuffed Suffolk puffs, and since then have made some new works featuring them, and these four pieces are currently in my Maldonado UY, exhibition.

As I write it’s mid January, and approximately a year ago (give or take a week) I bought some new fabric which turns out to have been the last fabric purchase in a year. I hadn’t declared a New Year Resolution to do so, but, in effect everything I’ve made since then, 2D or 3D, has all been from fabric I already had in my stash or at least partly made using recycled fabric. I’ll continue on this path to see how far I can take it… basically, in landscape terms, I’ve definitely moved from the stash building/deposition phase of the last 4+ decades to the stash reduction/erosion phase, and who can say how long this phase of the Fabric Stash Cycle will last? I’ll continue on this path to see how far I can take it before something interrupts this process!





