Curtain rod+polar fleece=design wall
#1
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: Central NM
Posts: 1,596
Curtain rod+polar fleece=design wall
Looked all over today looking for flannel backed tablecloth and none to be found. Had a ah ha moment and said to self...I have a thin polar fleece lap blanket and odd curtain rod. Pinned the blanket over the rod. DH used two nails for the rod to sit on. Push pins to stretch it out a bit and wa laa....design wall. Cost...zero. Not huge but big enough for what I need. It is "hanging" on the wall in the laundry room which is next to my sewing room. Really need this to help organized the scrappy quilt making for DH's former MIL. Now...why didn't I think about this 5 to 15 years ago?
#3
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Tennessee, UC area
Posts: 1,584
What a wonderful 'hack' for design wall! I have needed but didn't have wall space. But I do have a decorative curtain rod & brackets, and a fleece lap blanket waiting for rod pocket. The rod can remain attached to wall, blanket added for quick previewing of blocks, then removed. Thank you for posting this brilliant idea.
#4
Power Poster
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 17,827
Good for you ..... you won't regret it one bit.
Fleece works great!
My design walls (yes, I have multiples) are all fleece.
During my trial period, I tried flannel and flannel back tablecloths as well.
The fleece proved to be the overall winner with more "hold-it" power!
In fact, I have put queen quilts on the fleece wall ... and it holds!
However, I do put a few pins in, if I leave it for anytime ... just in case!
Fleece works great!
My design walls (yes, I have multiples) are all fleece.
During my trial period, I tried flannel and flannel back tablecloths as well.
The fleece proved to be the overall winner with more "hold-it" power!
In fact, I have put queen quilts on the fleece wall ... and it holds!
However, I do put a few pins in, if I leave it for anytime ... just in case!
Last edited by QuiltE; 09-25-2020 at 02:39 PM.
#5
That's brilliant! We just went through the not-so-pretty process of sticking flannel fabric to some foam boards -thereby gumming up the entire garage floor - and still need to figure out the right hardware to mount those to the wall. I love your simple solution.
...btw, how *does* one get spray glue off of a concrete floor?
...btw, how *does* one get spray glue off of a concrete floor?
#7
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Mendocino Coast, CA
Posts: 5,007
I love your idea! I work in a very, small space that it shared with an office and guest quarters. There's just no place for a solid wall. With this, you can collapse the rod and fold up the curtain and voila...it's gone.