Kathy... the Vicodin will store for years in a cool dry place. We've used some that was 10 years old... no problems.
Watch the cloth at WalMart... they do have some brand name cotton (for quilting), but by and large, their fabric is such low quality that it really doesn't pay to put the time and effort into sewing things with it. Of course, many people no longer have any idea what QUALITY fabric is like... the clothing, etc sold at most brand name stores has been rapidly deteriorating in quality over the past 10 years or more... it's how they've managed to hold the line on prices as the price of wool, silk, linen and now polyester and cotton skyrocketed.
My DD has two little boys- 2 years and 6 months. I sew some items for them occasionally- Christmas and birthday presents, etc. They aren't fancy... these are little boys, after all! I sew denim overalls, flannel shirts, cotton interlock knit shirts (with decorative iron on animals or embroidered designs) and most of their pajamas. She calls them "heirlooms" and as they outgrow them, she packs them away for the next grandchildren to come. The purchased clothing is very often too ragged to bother putting away after the second kid has outgrown them. She says you can tell the difference after about three wash cycles! That's TERRIBLE!!
If you want to sew, consider buying fabric online... I know, it's not as rewarding because you can't handle it and see the precise colors, etc. But these links following carry GOOD fabrics, and the prices are often competitive with WalMart's prices. HOWEVER, the quality difference is stunning.
Just one example: I love to quilt, and I love batik fabrics. I've stocked up on them over the past 3-4 years, knowing that the days of being able to buy a yard of hand dyed and hand printed batiks for $5-$6 were rapidly fading. But, as a quilter and fabriholic, I'm always watching for a good deal. So, I saw "fat quarters" of batik fabrics at WalMart for $1 each. That's $4 a yard... REALLY good deal (although I didn't pay much more than that for anything in my stash). I grabbed 10 of them, brought them home, and - as I always do, especially with batiks, which ALWAYS lose dye the first wash- tossed them in the washer and dryer. When I started pressing them to put them away, I discovered WHY they were so cheap. The fabric quality was TERRIBLE. It was like a loosely woven gauze/muslin.. the threads had slubs in them, and the print quality was horrible.. drips of wax, uneven dye colors. It looked like a kindergartener had been turned loose with the dyes. But that's cosmetic; it was the fabric weight and weave that made it unusable.
And it didn't show up until it had been washed once- it's amazing what the various treatments and chemical finishes can do in terms of changing the essential character and "hand" of a fabric on the bolt!! I'd NEVER put that fabric into a quilt... it would start falling apart after a couple washings. Yes, it was a couple bucks cheaper per yard than fat quarters from
www.thousandsofbolts.com. But if I'm making a baby quilt, I may put fifty to a hundred hours into it. Saving 10 bucks overall on the fabric is NOT a bargain if it won't hold up to washing...
So, check these places:
www.thousandsofbolts.com
www.fashionfabricclub.com
www.fabricmartfabrics.com
www.connectingthreads.com
www.fabric.com
There are others, but these have the nicest cottons and lightweight knits and wovens for summer.
Good sewing!
Summerthyme