{"title":"How to Choose Quilting Fabric (A Quilter's Fabric Pull Walkthrough)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/quilting/how-to-choose-quilting-fabric","category":{"slug":"quilting","name":"Quilting"},"creator":{"name":"Quilt Addicts Anonymous (Stephanie Soebbing)","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIi_BVJctA_IwxpZv63rpBw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wr2F3789w6k"},"tldr":"Learn how to choose quilting fabric like a kit curator: pick a focal print, layer coordinating prints, anchor with solids, and audit for color balance.","totalDurationSeconds":725,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Cutting counter or large flat work surface","Smartphone camera for grayscale value check","Color wheel reference"],"materials":["One focal print fabric (1 yard)","Coordinating quilting cotton prints (half yard each, 3-5 prints)","Quilting cotton solids in palette colors (third yard each)","Low-volume basics: stripes, tiny dots, small florals (third yard each)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Start with One Focal Fabric You Cannot Stop Thinking About","text":"The first decision is the most important one. Stephanie picks her focal print first - the Tilda Circus Life elephant in Jubilee blue. She walked past it in three different quilt shops before she finally bought a yard. When a print keeps calling you back, that is the print to build a quilt around.The focal fabric sets the color story, the mood, and the fussy-cutting opportunities for the entire quilt. Buy a full yard at minimum so you have room to fussy cut without panic. A half yard works if you are doing a small project or know exactly which motif you want to feature, but a full yard leaves you space to change your mind."},{"number":2,"title":"Pull Coordinating Prints from the Same Collection","text":"Rather than buy a matching fat quarter bundle - too kitted - Stephanie pulls half-yard cuts of other prints from the same Tilda collection. She picks one of each design, never two of the same print in different colors, so the pull looks curated instead of factory-assembled.Half yards are the right amount of fabric when you do not know exactly what you are making yet. Enough to fussy cut around an interesting motif if you want, enough to just cross-cut into strips if the design calls for that. Decision deferred. Same designer keeps everything in the same visual language: thread weights, scale relationships, dye tones all feel related."},{"number":3,"title":"Anchor the Palette with Tilda Solids","text":"Solids give the eye a place to rest. After the prints, Stephanie adds two Tilda solids - a salmon pink and a mustard - in third-yard cuts. The salmon is not an exact match to the pink in the elephant print (the print pink reads more coral), but it is close enough not to clash, and the small mismatch actually pulls the elephant forward as the focal.Solids do not need fussy cutting, so smaller cuts work fine. Third yards give you enough for sashing, borders, or background piecing without overcommitting fabric you might not use. Pick the solid by holding it against the focal print and watching how the focal reads when the solid is next to it."},{"number":4,"title":"Add Tilda Basics for Print Variety Without Chaos","text":"Basics sit between solids and feature prints - tiny dots, thin stripes, low-volume textures. They add print interest without competing with the focal. Stephanie pulls a salmon basic with a stripe, a blue-aqua basic that matches the elephant's body, and a darker blue that matches the print's background.The basics are the supporting players. Each stripe and texture is slightly different from the others, so when two basics share a quilt block they look intentional rather than repetitive. Same third-yard cut as the solids - this is connective tissue between the bold prints, not the main event."},{"number":5,"title":"Lay the Pull Out in Color Order to Spot the Gaps","text":"After every trip to the cutting counter, Stephanie arranges the fabrics in color order on the work surface. Pinks on one end, yellows in the middle, blues and teals on the other. The eye spots imbalance fast when the fabrics are sorted by color rather than scattered.Three pinks, three yellows, two blues, one teal. The mustards stacked together overpower the rest of the pull. The single teal looks lonely. Color-order layout is the audit step - it tells you exactly what is missing before you walk back to the cutting counter for a second pass."},{"number":6,"title":"Fill the Color Gaps with Targeted Small-Scale Pulls","text":"Stephanie goes back to the basics rack for two more pulls: a tiny teal floral to back up the lonely teal and a tiny mustard floral to balance the yellow column. She buys two cuts of the same teal floral print, which becomes the only repeated print in the whole pull.Now the layout reads three pinks, four yellows, four blues. Balanced. Small-scale prints are the right tool for gap-filling because they add a color without competing with the focal. A bold large-scale print would steal attention. A tiny floral just adds the color you needed."},{"number":7,"title":"Edit the Pull and Pull Anything That Fights the Focal","text":"Stephanie had grabbed a small dark dot print early on, thinking it might work as a background. Once the rest of the pull came together, she realized the dark dot was too heavy - the lighter basics she pulled later were going to make it pop forward instead of recede. Out it comes. Back to the stash for a different quilt.This is the editing step that separates a good fabric pull from a great one. Every fabric has to earn its place by supporting the focal. Buying something you end up not using is fine. Forcing a fabric into a quilt because you already paid for it is how a pull starts feeling muddy."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-30T15:13:00.813Z","published":"2026-05-30T14:59:07.369Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}