bobbin thread storage question
#33
Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 76
I store all of my "empty" bobbins in a framed coin purse I got free in a Mollie Makes magazine. I store my wound bobbins with the thread using a rubber band. I can't remember where I saw this, but it is BRILLIANT!
Thread one end of the rubber band through your bobbin. Pull that end through the other end and pull tight. You now have a bobbin "button" on one end of your rubber band. Now wrap the "non-button" end (both bands) all the way around your thread and over the bobbin, as if you were buttoning a button. Gosh, I don't know if I explained it right. Sure wish I could find it online. I'm using it now and just LOVE it. Neither the bobbin or the spool of thread unravel and are kept together. You can even wind multiple bobbins and store several on one spool until you are ready to sew.
Thread one end of the rubber band through your bobbin. Pull that end through the other end and pull tight. You now have a bobbin "button" on one end of your rubber band. Now wrap the "non-button" end (both bands) all the way around your thread and over the bobbin, as if you were buttoning a button. Gosh, I don't know if I explained it right. Sure wish I could find it online. I'm using it now and just LOVE it. Neither the bobbin or the spool of thread unravel and are kept together. You can even wind multiple bobbins and store several on one spool until you are ready to sew.
#34
Some great ideas here, what a talented group! I really like the idea by Girlfriend of the self-adhesive bags; they certainly seem inexpensive enough and are in line with what I currently do. When I complete a project, I use a ’snack size’ Zip-loc bag to store the left-over matching spool of thread and bobbin.
I also just found some wooden bobbin (tray) holders, filled with bobbins at a church yard sale (25 cents a set) that I had never seen before. They are single wooded racks that remind me of Scrabble letter trays except they lay flat and have magnetic trips across the bottom to hold the bobbins secure. I just got them and unfortunately have not taken a photo of them yet, but I like them and plan on using them to hold my empty bobbins. Perhaps someone else has them that can share a picture. Of course, these are great for metal bobbins but would not work with the new plastic ones.
I also just found some wooden bobbin (tray) holders, filled with bobbins at a church yard sale (25 cents a set) that I had never seen before. They are single wooded racks that remind me of Scrabble letter trays except they lay flat and have magnetic trips across the bottom to hold the bobbins secure. I just got them and unfortunately have not taken a photo of them yet, but I like them and plan on using them to hold my empty bobbins. Perhaps someone else has them that can share a picture. Of course, these are great for metal bobbins but would not work with the new plastic ones.
#35
#37
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 4,688
I have used the straight sided pill bottles if I have only a few of one color (or if they are all the same color. Janome put out some colored bobbins in plastic cases -- I use pink for poly, blue for rayon and the clear for cotton. Helps me since I have some rayon and ploly that are the same colors.
#38
Power Poster
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Eastern Washington
Posts: 29,519
I use the Bobbin Saver donuts for most of mine. A different color for each machine.
Also use the 2-sided plastic cases that can get at Walmart for little toy cars. I can store my specialty threads and bobbins in the same bin.
Also use the 2-sided plastic cases that can get at Walmart for little toy cars. I can store my specialty threads and bobbins in the same bin.
#39
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Corpus Christi, Tx.
Posts: 16,105
Unable to post pic. I put together with foam board a spool board. Cut skewers and small dowel rods leftover from other projects. Stuffed the dowel rods into the foam board for the size then pulled out and glued the end to go back into the board. The matching bobbin same way just under the spool. I angled the dowels so the spools wouldn't fall off. When I buy thread, I usually by 2 of what I need depending on the quilt.
#40
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 4,394
I keep thread spools on those hanging, wooden spool racks (Joann's or Fons/Porter). The pegs on the rack are short so I bought some of those long toothpick/skewers that are about 4 inches long at the grocery. When I put the thread spool on the peg, I insert a skewer and then I can add the bobbin(s) to the top of the thread spool, keeping them all together.
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AngieS
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10-06-2011 10:06 PM