Wadding UK: The No-Nonsense Buying Guide for Quilting, Bags, Cushions and Crafts

By Nahyaan Poonawala  •  0 comments  •   21 minute read

Wadding UK: The No-Nonsense Buying Guide for Quilting, Bags, Cushions and Crafts

If you have ever stood in front of a shelf (or scrolled through a webpage) full of wadding options and felt your eyes glaze over, you are in good company. Wadding UK searches spike every year as sewists discover, usually halfway through a project, that not all wadding is created equal. Buy the wrong one and your quilt ends up either flat as a pancake or so puffy it will not fit under the sewing machine foot. Buy the right one and your project looks like it came from a professional workroom.

Wadding, sometimes called batting depending on which side of the Atlantic you learned to sew, is the soft layer that sits between two pieces of fabric. It is what gives a quilt its warmth, a tote bag its structure, a cushion its plumpness and a child's toy its squidge. Without it, most padded sewing projects would simply be two thin sheets of cloth stitched together with nothing in between.

The trouble is that "wadding" covers a huge range of products. There is low loft and high loft. There is cotton feel and polyester. There is fusible fleece that sticks to fabric with an iron and standard wadding that needs to be sandwiched and stitched. There is wadding sold by the metre and wadding sold in bulk bundles that work out far cheaper per metre. Choosing between them without guidance is a bit like trying to choose paint without knowing the difference between matt, satin and gloss.

This guide exists to take the guesswork out of it. We will walk through what wadding actually is, why GSM and loft matter more than most beginners realise, and which type suits which project, whether that is a patchwork quilt, a structured handbag, a plump cushion, a child's toy or a piece of upholstered furniture needing a new lease of life. Throughout, we will point you towards specific products from the Wadding UK collection at Pound A Metre, all sold at prices that make experimenting with different types far less daunting than it would be elsewhere.

A quick note on delivery and value first. Pound A Metre ships across the UK, and the wadding range is built around bundles as much as single-metre purchases, because most sewists end up needing more than they first think. A bundle will almost always work out cheaper per metre than buying piecemeal, and we will flag the best bundles for different budgets and project types as we go.

Whether you have been sewing for thirty years or picked up a machine for the first time last month, by the end of this guide you should know exactly which wadding to add to your basket.

What Wadding Actually Does (And Why It Is Not Just Filler)

It is tempting to think of wadding as an afterthought. The fabric is the star of the show, surely, and the wadding is just there to bulk things out. In practice, wadding does far more structural and aesthetic work than most beginners expect.

In a quilt, wadding is what traps warm air, giving the finished piece its insulating quality. The fabric on either side could be the finest cotton in the world, but without wadding in the middle, the quilt would be a glorified bedsheet. In a bag, wadding gives panels enough body to hold their shape when the bag is empty and enough resilience to bounce back after being squashed under a laptop or a week's shopping. In a cushion, wadding (or stuffing, depending on the technique) is the difference between a pad that looks plump on a sofa and one that looks like it has given up.

Wadding also affects how a finished piece behaves over time. A quilt with the wrong wadding might look fine fresh off the sewing machine but go flat and lifeless after its first wash. A bag with too little wadding will lose its shape within a few weeks of daily use. Getting the choice right at the buying stage saves you from redoing work later.

The Beginner Mistake We See Most Often

New sewists very often buy the thinnest, cheapest wadding they can find because it seems like the safest option. In reality, the most common regret we hear about is wadding that was too light for the project, resulting in a flat, disappointing quilt or a bag that collapses in on itself. If in doubt, go up one weight rather than down.

Loft Explained: What It Means and Why It Changes Everything

"Loft" describes how thick and springy a wadding is when it is left to relax, uncompressed. It is one of those terms that sounds technical but is actually quite intuitive once you have felt the difference between a low loft and a high loft product side by side.

Low loft wadding is thin and compresses easily under the sewing machine foot. It is the choice for projects where you want the stitching itself to be visible and crisp, such as wall hangings, table runners and lap quilts with detailed machine quilting.

High loft wadding is noticeably thicker and puffier. It traps more air, which means more warmth, and it gives a project a rounder, more three-dimensional look. This is the wadding to reach for when you want a quilt that looks generously plump on a bed, or a cushion that holds its shape rather than sitting flat.

There is no universally "better" loft. The right choice depends entirely on what you are making and how you want it to look and feel.

High Loft vs Low Loft at a Glance

Feature Low Loft High Loft
Thickness Thin, flat Thick, puffy
Best for Wall hangings, table runners, garments Bed quilts, plump cushions, tied quilts
Stitch definition Sharp and visible Softer, less defined
Warmth Light Warmer
Ease of machine quilting Easier to manoeuvre Needs more space under the machine arm
Example product Premium Super Soft 150gsm Wadding Premium 8oz High Loft Wadding / Batting

Expert Tip

If you are making your first quilt and you are not sure which loft to choose, start with a mid-weight option rather than going to either extreme. A 150gsm to 230gsm wadding gives enough body to feel substantial without becoming a wrestling match under your machine's throat space.

GSM: The Number That Tells You More Than the Label Does

GSM stands for grams per square metre, and it is the single most useful number on a wadding product listing once you understand what it tells you. Put simply, a higher GSM means a denser, heavier wadding. A lower GSM means something lighter and more breathable.

Most sewists glance past GSM and judge wadding by touch alone, but touch can be misleading when you are buying online and cannot feel the product before it arrives. GSM gives you a consistent, comparable figure across different products, which is particularly useful when you are choosing between similar-sounding items.

At Pound A Metre, the Premium Super Soft 150gsm Wadding and the Premium Super Soft 230gsm Wadding sit at opposite ends of a genuinely useful spectrum.

GSM Comparison Guide

GSM Feel Typical Use Notes
100 to 150gsm Light, drapes well Baby quilts, wall hangings, garments Easier to hand quilt
150 to 200gsm Balanced, versatile Lap quilts, cushions, general crafts Good all-rounder for beginners
200 to 250gsm Dense, substantial Bed quilts, heavier cushions, upholstery padding Holds shape well over time
250gsm+ Very dense Heavy-duty upholstery, structured padding Less common for standard quilting

Beginner Tip

Do not assume thicker always means better. A baby quilt made with a heavy, dense wadding can end up stiff and uncomfortable rather than soft and snuggly. Match the GSM to the end use, not to whichever number sounds the most impressive.

Matching Wadding to Your Project: A Practical Walkthrough

This is the section most people searching for wadding actually want, so let us get straight into it. Different projects place different demands on wadding, and what works brilliantly for one will be entirely wrong for another.

Quilting

Quilting is probably what most people think of first when they hear the word wadding. For everyday bed quilts, something in the 150gsm to 230gsm range gives you warmth and weight without being unmanageable under a domestic sewing machine. The Premium Super Soft 230gsm Wadding is a strong choice for quilts that will see regular use on a bed, while the lighter 150gsm version suits decorative pieces, cot quilts and anything where you want your quilting stitches to stand out clearly.

If you want a properly plump, traditional-looking patchwork quilt with a tied rather than densely stitched finish, reach for the Premium 8oz High Loft Wadding / Batting. The extra loft gives a satisfying puffiness that low loft simply cannot replicate.

Bag Making

Bags need structure more than warmth, which changes the calculation entirely. A floppy bag is a failed bag, no matter how beautiful the outer fabric is. For tote bags, market bags and beginner projects where you want generous yardage to practise with, the Wadding Scraps Bundle gives roughly nine metres of usable material across multiple pieces, which is excellent for working through several bag patterns without constantly reordering.

For bags made in dark fabrics, white wadding can sometimes ghost through at the seams, particularly with looser weaves. The Black Bag Wadding solves that problem cleanly and is a favourite for laptop sleeves, structured handbags and anything made in navy or charcoal fabric.

If you are setting up a small bag-making business or sew bags as gifts throughout the year, the 2 Metre Bag Wadding / Batting Bundle and the 2 Metre Bag Super Soft Wadding Bundle both give you enough yardage to complete several projects, with the Super Soft version suited to bags where a softer hand feel matters, such as lined pouches or fabric gift bags.

Cushions

A cushion lives or dies by how it sits. Too little filling and it looks deflated within a week. The right wadding, layered correctly, gives a cushion structure that lasts. The Premium Super Soft 230gsm Wadding works well doubled up inside a cushion cover for a properly plump result, while the Premium Super Soft Fluffy Wadding gives a softer, more relaxed look that suits scatter cushions and lighter furnishing styles.

Soft Toys and Children's Crafts

For toys, the priority shifts from structure to safety and washability. Many sewists use loose polyester stuffing rather than sheet wadding for three-dimensional toys, but wadding still has its place in flatter soft toys, comfort blankets and quiet books. The Premium Super Soft Fluffy Wadding is a popular choice here because of its gentle, washable feel against young skin.

Upholstery and Home Furnishing

Upholstery work, whether you are reviving a dining chair or padding a headboard, benefits from a denser, more substantial wadding that will not compress flat under repeated sitting or leaning. The Premium 8oz High Loft Wadding / Batting and the heavier end of the 230gsm range both give the durability that upholstery demands.

Recommended Wadding by Project

Project Recommended Product Why
Bed quilt Premium Super Soft 230gsm Warmth and weight for everyday use
Wall hanging Premium Super Soft 150gsm Crisp stitch definition
Tote bag Wadding Scraps Bundle Generous yardage, good structure
Laptop sleeve Black Bag Wadding No ghosting through dark fabric
Scatter cushion Premium Super Soft Fluffy Wadding Soft, relaxed plumpness
Reading cushion Premium Super Soft 230gsm Doubled for a fuller feel
Quiet book / soft toy panel Premium Super Soft Fluffy Wadding Gentle, washable feel
Headboard padding High Loft 8oz Durable under repeated use

Polyester vs Cotton Feel Wadding: Which Side Are You On?

This is one of the most enduring debates in the sewing community, and like most enduring debates, the honest answer is "it depends what you want."

Polyester wadding is lightweight, springs back well after washing and does not shrink. It is the practical choice for anything that will be washed often, such as children's quilts, everyday cushions and soft toys. It holds its loft remarkably well over years of use.

Cotton feel wadding has a softer, more natural drape and a slightly heavier hand. Many quilters prefer it for the way it moves and ages, developing a slightly crinkled, lived-in look after a few washes that some makers actively want.

Neither is objectively superior. It is a question of what you value in the finished piece.

Polyester vs Cotton Feel Wadding

Factor Polyester Wadding Cotton Feel Wadding
Weight Lighter Slightly heavier
Shrinkage Minimal to none Can shrink slightly on first wash
Drape Crisper Softer, more natural
Washability Excellent, holds loft Good, may soften over time
Best for Children's items, frequent washing Heirloom quilts, vintage-style projects
Example product Premium Super Soft Fluffy Wadding 5 Metre Cotton Feel Wadding Bundle

Fusible Fleece: The Shortcut Most Bag Makers Wish They Had Found Sooner

Fusible fleece occupies a slightly different space from standard wadding. It combines a soft, padded layer with a heat-activated adhesive backing, meaning you can press it directly onto your fabric with a hot iron rather than pinning, basting and quilting a separate wadding layer.

This makes it a brilliant time-saver for bag making, fabric bowls, storage baskets, pot holders and padded placemats, where you want body and structure without the extra steps of sandwiching and stitching a traditional wadding layer. The Iron-On Fusible Fleece at Pound A Metre is 90cm wide, which covers most bag panels in a single piece without joining.

How Fusible Fleece Saves Time

  • No pinning or basting required before stitching
  • Bonds permanently with a hot iron in seconds
  • Reduces bulk compared to layering wadding plus interfacing
  • Works well combined with cotton fabric for bag exteriors
  • Suitable for appliqué and structured craft projects

Beginner Tip

Always test your iron temperature on a scrap piece first. Fusible fleece bonds best with steady, even pressure and the correct heat setting for your fabric type. Too hot, and you risk scorching delicate fabrics. Too cool, and the bond will not hold.

Buying in Bulk: Why Bundles Make More Sense Than They First Appear

There is a common assumption that buying in bulk is only worthwhile for businesses or extremely prolific hobbyists. In practice, even sewists who make a handful of projects a year tend to find that bundles work out significantly cheaper per metre than buying single lengths, simply because of how wadding is priced at scale.

The 10 Metre Super Soft Wadding Bundle and the larger 20 Metre Super Soft Wadding Bundle suit anyone who quilts, makes cushions or sews bags regularly enough that running out mid-project is a genuine annoyance. Having a roll in the cupboard means never having to pause a project to wait for a delivery.

If you like variety more than volume, the 15 Metre Wadding Bundle spreads your purchase across four different types, which is a sensible way to work out which weight and feel you actually prefer before committing to a large quantity of one type.

For genuinely outstanding value, the Limited Offer Supreme Variety Bundle gives you a broad spread of wadding types in one purchase, which is particularly useful for newer sewists who are still figuring out their preferences project by project.

Bundle Comparison

Bundle Quantity Best For
Wadding Scraps Bundle Approx. 9 metres Bag making, practice projects
10 Metre Super Soft Wadding Bundle 10 metres Regular quilters and cushion makers
20 Metre Super Soft Wadding Bundle 20 metres High-volume sewists, workshops, market sellers
15 Metre Wadding Bundle 15 metres, 4 varieties Sewists still deciding on their preferred weight
Limited Offer Supreme Variety Bundle 8 metres, mixed Beginners wanting to sample multiple types
5 Metre Cotton Feel Wadding Bundle 5 metres Cotton feel enthusiasts and heirloom quilters

For the Budget-Conscious

If cost is the main consideration rather than variety, the 3KG Wadding Scraps Bag and the Mixed Wadding Remnant Bundle are both excellent for filling draught excluders, pet beds, weighted lap pads and other projects where premium-grade wadding is not strictly necessary. They are also a genuinely sustainable choice, making good use of offcuts rather than letting them go to waste.

Best Choice by Budget

Budget Level Recommended Option Why It Works
Tight budget, occasional sewing Mixed Wadding Remnant Bundle Low cost, suitable for non-critical filling
Moderate budget, regular sewing 10 Metre Super Soft Wadding Bundle Strong value per metre
Higher budget, frequent or bulk sewing 20 Metre Super Soft Wadding Bundle Best price per metre at scale
One-off special project Premium Super Soft 230gsm Wadding Targeted purchase, no excess

How Professional Makers Choose Their Wadding

Experienced quilters and bag makers tend to approach wadding selection differently from hobbyists making their first or second project. Rather than picking based on price alone, they work backwards from the finished item's intended use, thinking about how a customer will wash and handle a quilt, or how a bag will hold up after weeks of daily use, rather than just how it looks fresh off the machine. This is why experienced makers often settle on one or two go-to wadding types for each category of project and stick with them.

If you are moving from occasional sewing towards more serious or commercial work, it is worth adopting the same mindset: test a wadding type across a full project, wash it the way the end user would, and assess how it performs before making it your standard choice.

Expert Tip

Keep a small notebook or spreadsheet of which wadding you used for which project, along with how it performed after washing. This sounds excessive for a hobby, but it saves enormous amounts of trial and error once you have made more than a handful of items.

Mistakes People Make When Buying Wadding

Even experienced sewists fall into a few common traps when buying wadding, particularly when shopping online without being able to feel the product first.

  • Buying based on price alone, without checking GSM or loft, then being disappointed when the finished project feels too thin or too heavy
  • Assuming all wadding is interchangeable, when bag wadding, quilting wadding and craft wadding are genuinely different in firmness and recovery
  • Underestimating quantity needed, leading to an awkward seam partway through a large quilt
  • Ignoring colour for bag projects, then discovering white wadding shows through dark or loosely woven outer fabric
  • Choosing the same wadding for every project, regardless of whether it actually suits the brief

Quick Self-Check Before You Buy

Ask yourself three questions before adding wadding to your basket: What will this project be used for? How often will it be washed? Do I want it to feel soft and yielding, or firm and structured? The answers will point you towards the right loft and weight far more reliably than price alone.

Can Wadding Be Washed?

Yes, in almost all cases, though how you wash it depends on the fibre content and the finished project. Polyester wadding is generally machine washable at standard household temperatures and recovers its loft well, even after repeated washing, which is exactly why it suits children's items and anything used daily.

Cotton feel wadding can usually be machine washed too, though it may soften and shrink very slightly on its first wash. Many quilters consider this a feature rather than a flaw, since it produces the slightly crinkled, antique look associated with traditional quilts. If you want to avoid any shrinkage at all, pre-washing your wadding before starting your project is a sensible precaution, though most sewists skip this step for everyday projects.

For anything containing a high loft fill, gentle washing and low-temperature tumble drying (with a couple of clean tennis balls to help redistribute the fill) tends to give the best results.

How to Store Wadding Properly

Wadding is bulky, which makes storage a genuine practical concern, especially with bundles or longer lengths.

  • Store wadding rolled rather than folded, to avoid permanent creases that are difficult to press out
  • Keep it somewhere dry, since damp storage can encourage mustiness
  • Use breathable storage bags rather than fully sealed plastic
  • Label remnants and offcuts by approximate size, so the right piece is easy to find later
  • Keep different weights and lofts separated and clearly marked, since it is surprisingly easy to lose track once a roll is out of its original packaging

Layering Wadding Correctly

Sometimes a single layer of wadding is not enough for the look or warmth you want, and layering two pieces is a legitimate technique, particularly for cushions. It generally works best to combine two pieces of the same loft and weight rather than mixing dramatically different types, since uneven layers create lumps and an inconsistent finish. For cushions, doubling a mid-weight wadding such as the 230gsm option gives a noticeably fuller result than a single layer. For quilts, layering is less common but is sometimes used deliberately by art quilters seeking a particular textural effect on pieces that will be displayed rather than washed regularly.

Seasonal Projects That Make the Most of Wadding

Wadding is not just for winter quilts, though that is certainly when interest peaks. In spring and summer, lighter projects such as picnic blankets and breathable cushion covers suit lower GSM options. Autumn and winter favour heavier, high loft choices for warm bed quilts and padded home accessories, while Christmas brings a spike in soft toy and quilted gift making, where the Premium Super Soft Fluffy Wadding is a gentle, popular choice for handmade presents.

Creative Projects You Might Not Have Considered

Beyond quilts, bags and cushions, wadding turns up in a surprising number of other projects once you start looking for it.

  • Padded book covers and journal sleeves
  • Insulated lunch bags and bottle carriers
  • Quilted table runners and placemats
  • Padded ironing board covers
  • Draught excluders for doors and windows
  • Quilted Christmas tree skirts and stockings
  • Padded camera bags and laptop cases
  • Quilted pet beds and travel mats
  • Padded headboards and bench seat cushions

If you want project inspiration beyond the obvious, browsing the Fabric By The Metre Collection alongside the wadding range is a good way to plan colour and pattern combinations before you buy.

Where to Buy Wadding in the UK

There is no shortage of places to buy wadding in the UK, from large haberdashery chains to independent fabric shops and online specialists. What tends to separate a good source from a frustrating one is the combination of genuine product variety, clear weight and loft information, and pricing that allows you to experiment without overcommitting financially to a type you might not end up liking.

The Wadding UK collection at Pound A Metre is built around exactly that combination: single-metre options for testing a type, mid-size bundles for regular projects, and large bundles for anyone working at volume. Combined with UK-wide delivery, it removes a lot of the friction that comes with sourcing wadding from multiple smaller suppliers.

For wider sewing supplies, it is also worth browsing the Cotton Fabric Collection and the Fleece Collection, both of which pair naturally with wadding for quilting, bag making and home furnishing projects.

If you want broader reading on UK sewing standards and community resources, The Quilters' Guild UK and The Sewing Directory both offer detailed guidance for quilters at every level, and the Hobbycraft sewing guides are a useful general reference for craft techniques beyond wadding specifically.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is wadding?

Wadding is a soft, lofty layer of material placed between two pieces of fabric to add warmth, padding, structure or body. It is the inner layer of a quilt sandwich, the padding inside a structured bag panel, and the filling that gives cushions their shape. In American sewing terminology, the same material is usually called batting. Wadding comes in various weights, lofts and fibre types, each suited to different projects, which is why choosing the right one makes such a noticeable difference to the finished result.

What GSM should I buy?

The right GSM depends on your project. For lighter projects such as wall hangings, baby items and garments, look towards 100 to 150gsm. For general quilting, cushions and everyday crafts, 150 to 230gsm gives a good balance of substance without excessive bulk. For upholstery and heavy-duty padding, denser options above 230gsm tend to perform better. If you are unsure, a mid-range GSM such as 150 to 230gsm is a sensible, versatile starting point for most beginners.

Can I wash wadding?

Yes, most wadding is washable, though the details depend on fibre content. Polyester wadding is generally machine washable and recovers its loft reliably after washing. Cotton feel wadding can usually be washed too, though it may shrink slightly on its first wash, which many quilters consider part of its charm. Always check the specific product listing for any fibre-specific washing guidance before laundering a finished item for the first time.

Does wadding shrink?

Cotton feel wadding can shrink slightly, typically on the first wash, which gives quilts a softened, slightly crinkled look that many quilters actively seek out. Polyester wadding does not generally shrink in the same way and tends to hold its dimensions consistently wash after wash. If shrinkage would be a problem for your specific project, polyester is the safer choice, or you can pre-wash cotton feel wadding before cutting and sewing.

Can beginners use wadding?

Absolutely. Wadding is genuinely beginner-friendly, and there is no special skill required to sandwich it between fabric layers and stitch through it. The main thing beginners benefit from is understanding loft and GSM before buying, so the first project does not end up disappointingly thin or unexpectedly bulky. Starting with a mid-weight, versatile wadding is the easiest way to build confidence before experimenting with more specialist types.

What is loft?

Loft describes how thick and springy a wadding feels when relaxed and uncompressed. Low loft wadding is thin and flat, ideal for projects where you want crisp, visible quilting stitches. High loft wadding is thick and puffy, ideal for projects where you want a fuller, more rounded, traditional quilted look. Neither is better in absolute terms; the right loft depends entirely on the project and the finished look you are aiming for.

Which wadding is best for quilting?

For everyday bed quilts, a mid to high GSM option such as the Premium Super Soft 230gsm Wadding gives satisfying warmth and weight. For wall hangings and decorative pieces where stitch definition matters, the lighter 150gsm Wadding performs better. For a traditional, plump, tied quilt finish, high loft wadding such as the Premium 8oz High Loft Wadding is the right choice.

Which wadding is best for bags?

Bag making benefits from firmer, more structured wadding than standard quilting wadding. The Wadding Scraps Bundle is excellent value for practising multiple bag projects, while the Black Bag Wadding prevents ghosting through dark outer fabrics. For volume bag making, the bundled bag wadding options provide enough yardage for several projects at a lower cost per metre.

What is fusible fleece?

Fusible fleece is a soft, padded material with a heat-activated adhesive backing, allowing it to be ironed directly onto fabric without pinning or basting. It sits between standard wadding and interfacing in terms of firmness, and is particularly popular in bag making, fabric bowls, storage baskets and other structured craft projects where speed and a clean finish matter. The Iron-On Fusible Fleece is 90cm wide, suiting most standard bag panels in a single piece.

How do I store leftover wadding?

Store wadding rolled rather than folded to avoid permanent creasing, keep it somewhere dry to prevent mustiness, and use breathable storage rather than fully sealed plastic bags. Labelling remnants by approximate size makes it much easier to grab the right piece for a smaller project later, rather than unrolling several pieces to check.

Can I sew wadding by hand?

Yes, wadding can absolutely be hand sewn, and many quilters specifically choose hand quilting for the softer, slightly irregular stitch line it produces compared with machine quilting. Lower loft wadding is generally easier to hand stitch through than high loft, simply because there is less thickness for the needle to pass through with each stitch. If you are new to hand quilting, starting with a lighter weight wadding will make the learning curve considerably gentler.

Where can I buy wadding in the UK?

The Wadding UK collection at Pound A Metre offers a full range of weights, lofts and bundle sizes, with UK-wide delivery and pricing that makes it easy to try different types without a large upfront commitment. Whether you need a single three-metre length for a specific project or a bulk bundle to stock a regular sewing practice, the collection is built to cover both ends of that spectrum.

Final Thoughts: Choosing With Confidence

Wadding is one of those sewing materials that quietly determines whether a finished project feels professional or merely adequate. Get the loft, GSM and fibre type right for your specific project, and the difference shows immediately, in how a quilt drapes, how a bag holds its shape, and how a cushion looks plump rather than deflated.

The good news is that none of this requires guesswork once you understand the basics covered in this guide. Match your loft to your desired look, match your GSM to how substantial you want the finished piece to feel, and choose polyester or cotton feel based on how you want the project to age and wash.

The full Wadding UK collection at Pound A Metre covers every one of the scenarios discussed here, from single lengths to genuinely substantial bulk bundles, all at prices that make trying a new weight or loft far less of a gamble than it would be elsewhere. Combined with reliable UK delivery, it is a sensible place to stock up whether you are working on your first quilt or your fiftieth structured handbag.

Browse the collection, pick the wadding that matches your next project, and get back to the part of sewing that is actually enjoyable: making something with your own hands that you will be proud of for years to come.

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