Cheap fabric?
- MikeVDS
- Posts: 1899
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- Camp Name: Tiki Fuckos
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Cheap fabric?
We're making a cover for our dome and will need about 450 yards of material (~4000 sq. ft.). I was thinking burlap might be a good material and cheap but it looks like it will run about $1.00/yard. I've found a good material for about $0.30/yard, which may not even need fire retardant. Anyone have any good suggestions? We're going for a "lost on a desert island" type feel. I'd like to take large pieces of canvas and lash them together loosely, leaving gaps of a few inches between large pieces, but canvas is expensive. We have no set budget, but the more we can save on each project, the more projects we can afford to take on.
- Bob
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Some concrete yards & masonry suppliers sell burlap off ten foot wide rolls for pretty cheap. It's used for moisture-curing concrete slabs.
Amazing desert structures & stuff: http://sites.google.com/site/potatotrap/
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
"Let us say I suggest you may be human." -- Reverend Mother Gaius Helen Mohiam
Try browsing the yellow pages for banner shops in your vicinity- While I was working at one here in 'Kazoo it was almost my second job to rescue HUGE quantities of fabric from the dumpster. Serious, heinous waste of really nice heavy material, often with free pop art included! Also check tent and awning establishments.
Howdy From Kalamazoo
- diane o'thirst
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I'm still working my way through that C.A.R.E. package you sent me last summer 
We have a couple big awning shops here in Eugene, I'm going to hit them up for their scraps. Though I'm fully expecting them to smile and shake their heads...Eugenians are pretty good about recycling and cutting down on waste.
The thought was to make a 20-foot crazy-quilt groundtarp of canvas for my camp's footprint.
We have a couple big awning shops here in Eugene, I'm going to hit them up for their scraps. Though I'm fully expecting them to smile and shake their heads...Eugenians are pretty good about recycling and cutting down on waste.
The thought was to make a 20-foot crazy-quilt groundtarp of canvas for my camp's footprint.
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Excellent! Good point about larger population centers- Might have to stand in line for Free Goodies. Around here it's no problem, but what you don't get to in time goes straight to the landfill. Damn, I need a barn!diane o'thirst wrote:I'm still working my way through that C.A.R.E. package you sent me last summer
.
Howdy From Kalamazoo
- falk
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Don't forget to pre-shrink
Learned this the hard way: pre-shrink all your fabric. Cotton canvas shrinks about 10% when you wash it. Even if you don't wash it, it will shrink anyway.
It's no fun to arrive at the playa and discover that your canvas cover doesn't fit the frame any more.
It's no fun to arrive at the playa and discover that your canvas cover doesn't fit the frame any more.
- diane o'thirst
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I'm facing a semi-similar quandary with my shelter this year. I'm getting (ANOTHER!) Costco canopy but the damn thing about them is they're piss-poor insulators. They offer negligable at best warmth at night, and I'm fairly sensitive to chilling.
So I was looking around for possible insulation layers. I had some military/disaster blankets in my closet and I measured. I figured that I'd need about twelve of these babies to fully line the walls of the carport.
After a search on the 'net, I came back to good old Sportsman's Guide and guess what: they had a twelve-pack of disaster blankets for $57. The blankets measure 65" x 90" (that's 5'5" x 7'6") or 41 square feet. Each blanket would cost about $5.75. Not sure how to crunch the per-yard numbers on that one, but at a guess, it would come out to around $2/yd. (Math whizzes, feel very free to put a finer point on that figure).
The upside/downside is that a dome covered in those babies would be nice and warm: bad during the day, nice at night. The other downside is that they're drab, grey (but certainly no uglier than burlap) and according to Sportsman's Guide cannot be laundered (I'm using them as insulation layer under the carport tarps and facing them on the inside with nicer material, like potlatch blankets and Indian bedspreads).
So I was looking around for possible insulation layers. I had some military/disaster blankets in my closet and I measured. I figured that I'd need about twelve of these babies to fully line the walls of the carport.
After a search on the 'net, I came back to good old Sportsman's Guide and guess what: they had a twelve-pack of disaster blankets for $57. The blankets measure 65" x 90" (that's 5'5" x 7'6") or 41 square feet. Each blanket would cost about $5.75. Not sure how to crunch the per-yard numbers on that one, but at a guess, it would come out to around $2/yd. (Math whizzes, feel very free to put a finer point on that figure).
The upside/downside is that a dome covered in those babies would be nice and warm: bad during the day, nice at night. The other downside is that they're drab, grey (but certainly no uglier than burlap) and according to Sportsman's Guide cannot be laundered (I'm using them as insulation layer under the carport tarps and facing them on the inside with nicer material, like potlatch blankets and Indian bedspreads).
[url=http://tinyurl.com/245sagf][img]http://tinyurl.com/2bbr28j/.gif[/img][/url][url=http://tinyurl.com/23753ws][img]http://tinyurl.com/2auqebj/.gif[/img][/url][url=http://tinyurl.com/m4y82q][img]http://tinyurl.com/l56rdn/.gif[/img][/url]
Last year my Hushville neighbor kYtten brought a frequency-one PVC structure that she had sewn a custom cover for- All thrift store sheets, with neckties for fasteners. It was very cozy inside, and had a major "Mongol yurt" or "Arabian Nights" vibe. Church rummage sales are a good source of this kind of material, as are thrift stores. Sometimes the Chinese tarp-and-tool places have mover's blankets- Those nice quilted numbers.
Howdy From Kalamazoo
> After a search on the 'net, I came back to good old
> Sportsman's Guide and guess what: they had a twelve-pack
> of disaster blankets for $57.
I took a look at these, and Louise happened to be there. She says she suspects that the blankets are recycled woo and not woven - just sort of compressed like felt but not as good. She thinks the reason you are not to launder or dry clean them is that they will fall apart.
Whether this has any impact on your decision is up to you.
> Sportsman's Guide and guess what: they had a twelve-pack
> of disaster blankets for $57.
I took a look at these, and Louise happened to be there. She says she suspects that the blankets are recycled woo and not woven - just sort of compressed like felt but not as good. She thinks the reason you are not to launder or dry clean them is that they will fall apart.
Whether this has any impact on your decision is up to you.
- diane o'thirst
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It does. Thanks for the note. I thought that was odd. "Do not launder or dry clean!" 
Eh, well...back to the drawing board...think I saw Harbor Freight carrying those furniture quilts for $2.50 each. My mover from Pacifica to Eugene testified to their warmth, since he'd spent many a night wrapped up in them in his truck cab.
Eh, well...back to the drawing board...think I saw Harbor Freight carrying those furniture quilts for $2.50 each. My mover from Pacifica to Eugene testified to their warmth, since he'd spent many a night wrapped up in them in his truck cab.
[url=http://tinyurl.com/245sagf][img]http://tinyurl.com/2bbr28j/.gif[/img][/url][url=http://tinyurl.com/23753ws][img]http://tinyurl.com/2auqebj/.gif[/img][/url][url=http://tinyurl.com/m4y82q][img]http://tinyurl.com/l56rdn/.gif[/img][/url]
- CapSmashy
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Furnie pads (mover quilts) are very versatile. We use them on sets for everything from making the ground soft for an actor to lay on, to catching a gun as it gets "knocked" from someones hand, to helping shield the camera guy from us crazy fx guys, etc.
I think they would be warm as well.
Hmm...all I am finding on the HF website are the $5.99 cargo pads.
I think they would be warm as well.
Hmm...all I am finding on the HF website are the $5.99 cargo pads.
Playawaste Raiders cordially invites you to suck it.
- diane o'thirst
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Which is about how much the...heh-heh...<i>one-use-only</i> junk wool blankets at Sportsman's Guide would be after shipping. 
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- MikeVDS
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I've found quite a few things about that price. Lots of different discount fabrics can be found about that price. Someone posted some snow camo tarp things on here from sportsmansguide that were about that price. I was actually going to buy those but they sold out real quick. Ideally I'd like canvas (even if it's old) in pieces around 10'x10'. I don't think that cover will pan out this year. A hawaiian print, or many hawaiian print fabrics would be cool too. I'm not sure how well some of these fabrics i find will hold up in the wind though. A few burlaps were around that price too. I don't think I've found anything cheaper than 30 cents a yard, but close to that seems pretty common. Nothing great though.
cheap fabric
You might want to consider old sheets, table cloths and the like from the rejects from thrift stores (such as Goodwill). They sell the lower grade stuff by weight. It might take a little effort to find out who sells the culls at your local store or collection center. Often they bail the stuff up and sell it by weight to shippers that take it out of the country. A cheap source of mixed fabric. They usually sell the clothes separately from sheets, curtains and table cloths.