Quilting books and magazine Question
#1
Quilting books and magazine Question
Trying to reorganize my sewing room. I have several Quilting books and many years worth of quilting magazines all organized by what magazine and what year they are. I no longer use them and all are in new like condition. Would like to sell them all very cheaply to be ale to buy more quilting supplies. Does anyone know of a place that buys them, or what do you with them? They are whole years volumes. thanks in advance.
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
Posts: 12,930
You can look up your quilting books on Amazon to see the "Used - Like New" prices. You can decide if it's worthwhile to sell them there. It's pretty easy to list them, but there tends to be a lot of competition so they may not sell.
Magazines are expensive to mail because they cannot be sent media rate (because of the advertisements in them). You can try eBay or the SewItsForSale group on groups.yahoo.com, but I'm not sure how well they sell. I ended up giving mine to thrift shops and the local library. The library might keep some of them, but mostly I think they sell them at their annual used book sales.
Magazines are expensive to mail because they cannot be sent media rate (because of the advertisements in them). You can try eBay or the SewItsForSale group on groups.yahoo.com, but I'm not sure how well they sell. I ended up giving mine to thrift shops and the local library. The library might keep some of them, but mostly I think they sell them at their annual used book sales.
#4
Power Poster
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 16,511
My guild's free table is full of magazines every month. Most are new rarely over a year old. All the older ones are never taken so they are bundled up every three months and taken to thrift stores. When I find them at yard sales they are usually .10 each. Quilting books are in a big box and always .50 each or .25 for the thin booklets. I found one very rare quilt book and told the owner of it's worth. She said she didn't want it. I sold it on Ebay for $85 and donated that to the guild's fund for our MSQC trip. Check the book titles for worth before selling really cheap.
#6
#7
Thrift stores.....beware!
I gave a 3 foot high stack of quilt magazines to a thrift store only to find out later that they threw them away, as they do with all magazines! I was heartbroken, since they were still in great shape and could have found good homes. So....Beware!!!!!!!!
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 07-12-2018 at 09:25 AM. Reason: remove shouting/all caps
#8
As others have pointed out, there's not much demand for quilt magazines. I've started just tearing out any patterns that I like and throwing the rest away. I'm discontinuing almost all magazine subscriptions, but I still find myself buying too many books.
#9
Super Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,779
My guild's free table is full of magazines every month. Most are new rarely over a year old. All the older ones are never taken so they are bundled up every three months and taken to thrift stores. When I find them at yard sales they are usually .10 each. Quilting books are in a big box and always .50 each or .25 for the thin booklets. I found one very rare quilt book and told the owner of it's worth. She said she didn't want it. I sold it on Ebay for $85 and donated that to the guild's fund for our MSQC trip. Check the book titles for worth before selling really cheap.
#10
Super Member
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Ballwin, MO
Posts: 4,269
I list books and mags I don't want on ReUseIt, a yahoo group that facilitates giving away practically anything. You could see if they have one in your city. After looking into it, I didn't think it was worth the time to try and sell used books and magazines on line. Or, you could have a garage sale.
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