101 Uses For Left Over Batting Scraps
If you have been a quilter very long you have probably accumulated left over batting scraps. Recently this question was posted to members of Longarm Digest and Bayshore Longarm Quilters. We hope you enjoy our suggestions, even the silly ones!Permission to make a copy to share with your guild provided that it is printed in it's entirety and reference is made to this web location.
Compiled by karen O of Texas, A-1 Elite
Edited by Colleen in NE, GC w Turbo CL
(as we are known to our internet friends)
ENJOY!
1. Rough cut a 9 x 12 rectangle to use in your Swiffer - bonus, you can turn it over and use the other side too! (A very popular suggestion.) Here's another "Swiffer" mop invention: I use those swifter mops with pads, and I have made some of material like old flannel and put a 4-5" strip of batting down the middle. I get several floor washes with it, and can either throw them into the washing machine or throw them away. I sew down both sides. Really fast easy.
2. Cut 5" squares to use to make coasters
3. Use small odd shaped pieces to dust with
4. Have a small piece of batting at your sewing table to collect loose threads
5. Have another one at the ironing station to collect threads that you trim off while ironing
6. use them to pretest thread tension settings by sandwiching pieces between muslin trimmings, cutting them into squares of 6-10 inches and moving the sandwich around under the needle as the machine runs in constant or manual mode and with the longer pieces, you can clamp to the take-up roller (I have pvc pipe clamps) and lean on the other end with your tum and also use that to test thread tensions..
*More on those muslin sandwiches:* use my scraps with Muslin to practice, but my difference would be that I often zig-zag stitch a bunch of them together to get a bigger piece (on my sewing machine), and this gives me a "challenge piece" because I sew all different types together, and I can see how my practice looks on different battings.
7. Wipe the machine down with it! Also someone else said: I cut cotton batting into small squares and keep a stack next to my machine to wipe up oil leaks and wipe down the extra oil when oiling the machine.
8. Make small quilts for use in front of your coffee pot or other places where you get drips!
9. Make quilt as you go place mats.
Another placemat suggestion: I love to use my scraps for placemats for myself and to give as gifts. Cut into approx. 14" x 20" pieces and add to whatever you choose for top and backing. I also use this same size of batting scrap to make strip cut mats. These are easy, fast and help use up my fabric scraps, making great placemats or mats for tables under lamps, plants, etc.
10. Use for 'diaper' for your longarm. (Tuck a small piece under the bobbin area when my machine is parked)
11. Donate the batting scraps to your local senior center where they can be used to make small crafts.
12. Give them to a group of ladies who make raggedy quilts for charity.
13. The Cotton Theory uses small strips of batting. I have made one of the table runners.
14. A small piece of 80/20 batting around the thread in the guide on my serger type adapter keeps the thread from knotting or getting loose. Kind of the same idea as the sponge cube on the Gammill.
15. Use my extra batting for my dog kennels and even donate some to the local animal shelter. Or the practice muslin pieces I donate to the local animal shelter for doggie or kitty blankets.
16. Use small scraps for small projects like pot holders etc.
17. Our local hospital ladies auxiliary uses batting scraps to make “heart" pillows for heart surgery patients to hold to their chest when they have to cough or (heaven forbid) sneeze. Another idea: they use it for pillows to give to all the children who come in the ER
18. I use batting scraps to pack in boxes when I send a package. It is great because it doesn't weigh as much as newspaper and nothing ever gets broken when wrapped in it.
19. Another use for batting scraps - cut them in 5" squares and give them for auction items along with a pattern for one of the 'rag' quilts like the Christmas tree one.
20. How about a base for fiber post cards and journal sized quilts?
21. Wrap a big enough piece around the seat belt that bites your neck!
22. Whack off a chunk (precise cutting here, you notice) and safety pin it to my right shoulder. When I have loose threads, I don't toss them over my shoulder, I toss them TO my shoulder
23. I use them for fill when I mail out quilts.
24. If you ever use fusible batt you won't have any left over as it can be "pieced" pretty easily
25. My friend uses them to make "envelopes" for holding kits that another friend uses in classes she teaches. Anything over 10" goes there.
26. I have also given them to the Girl Scouts to sew together and use for their first quilts (usually one block pillows)
27. Use them in the winter to "chink" leaky windows or make draft stoppers.
28. Then there are biscuit quilts, raggy quilts, raggy jackets, etc.
29. Wrap it around the broom and use it to knock down the spider webs. Just throw it away, no messy broom bristles.
30. Wrap it around that casserole you are taking to the potluck. If it leaks, just throw it away! (96" goes around a lot of times!)
31. Cut it a bit smaller than your lamp base and protect your table.
32. I also use them to clean the wheels and tracks. (on a longarm machine)
33. Removing chalk marks on quilt tops.
34. I use small, potholder size scraps to erase the black marker lines off my white board. When the batting gets dirty, I just throw it away.
35. I give it to a friend that uses it for stuffing in teddy bears and animals she makes to sell at bazaars and craft sales.
36. I use some of my batting scraps to make quilted purses
37. Use for making the front portion of your anatomy appear to be more ample than it really is. Batting scraps are MUCH better than socks for this purpose.
38. Pincushions
39. Fabric Christmas ornaments
40. Christmas stockings
41. Pad photo album cover
42. Cut in 2 to 2 and a half inch squares bundle a dozen together with ribbon and give them to customers for make-up removal.
43. Give to guild members for craft projects - I try to remember to measure and tag scraps as to size just to know if they are big enough for table runners etc.
44. I make a 6" quilt block and use the smaller piece of batting with it, quilt it up, bind it and give it!
45. You know the small drawers you can get in the tool section that holds your nails, and bolts and washers? I use that for my jewelry. I place small pieces of batting on the bottom of the drawer so my rings, necklaces, and bracelets don't slide around when I pull the drawer open.
46. I have done strip quilts with strips 8" or wider batting just to practice on.
47. I use really small pieces to wipe up scraps of cloth that have dropped on a smooth tile floor.
48. I cut some of the batting into squares to hook my earrings/pins onto for my garage sale
49. I have also torn up the poly scraps to use for stuffing or filling of small throw pillows that I made the forms for.
50. I usually keep the scraps of batting to stuff baby toys.
51. I roll larger pieces and put them at the folds when folding my quilts for storage -- keeps the fabric from breaking down
52. I make TONS of the raw edge quilts and have taught all my relatives to do likewise. We take two 8" squares of fabric and put a 6" square of batting in between....sew an X over the sandwich - this makes one block. Then sew all those squares together into a quilt with the raw edges all to one side, either the top or the bottom. Clip the raw edges up to about 1/8 of the seams every 1/4" or so, and wash till it's fluffy. I've also taught school kids to make them, and our church quilting ladies. This is the BIGGEST use of the batt scraps that I have.
53. I use them to wrap breakables when mailing items.
54. I place them between my good seasonal glass plates so they don't scratch each other.
55. I sew cotton batt scraps together to make rice bags. Then I either use these hot or cold for soothing my achy body, OR ... I lay them on my quilts to take up the slack while I'm quilting a non-square, non-flat quilt. Kinda like bean bags.
56. I contribute it to anyone that will accept it -- quilt shops, church groups, school groups, relatives, etc.
57. I occasionally zig-zag scraps to do table runners or wall hangings that I am not particularly concerned about. You can't tell when it's done anyway
58. I also sew larger scraps together and use them in my own personal crib-size quilts
59. Use as snow at Christmas for decorating around little trees or your nativity scene.
60. Use in trapunto
61. I made a small padded camera case to wrap around my point and shoot camera. Put a little pocket in front for extra memory cards. The case and pocket are kept closed with Velcro and the neck strap comes out of the side of the top alongside the Velcro.
62. This may not be too popular but I actually have used small bits of cotton or cotton blend batting to act as a cushion between my lip and retainer gone haywire while I wait to get into the dentist!
63. I just remembered one...my DH (dear husband) an avid hunter uses leftover 100% cotton batting as "wads" when he's muzzle-loading. I bet that's a new one...
64 - 101 Please email us your suggestions to add to the list. karen@quiltsnkaboodle.com
And Now ...
A New Use for Packaged Batting


Thank you Pam in CA for this photo entitled
"Kicking Back In Batting"
"Kicking Back In Batting"
101 Uses for Left Over Batting
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