Britex also has a fabulous remnant section. My husband was looking for a
bottle green wool for a Dickens coat. We went to Britex and found the
perfect fabric----for $280 a yard! We gulped and said we were looking for
something less expensive. The salesperson sent us to the remnant floor and
there we found a remnant 3 5/8 yards long of great green wool fabric for a
total price of $50. Also a wool/silk blend piece 2 yards long for a
similarly low price. Their remnants are often BIG.
  

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Lavolta Press
Sent: Monday, July 16, 2007 10:27 AM
To: Historical Costume
Subject: Re: [h-cost] Re: SF/SJ shopping recommendations



> Britex in SF is where you going for the expensive (silk on silk 
> velvet, unusual (velvet ribbon) or designer items. Big yawn for us 
> historical types.  You wont find historical looking embroidereds.


Something must be wrong with me . . . I've bought lots of costuming fabric
at Britex.  No, they do not specialize in fabrics for historic costumers.
There is no such store in the San Francisco Bay Area. But Britex is by far
the largest general fabric store in the San Francisco Bay Area, and they
have a large selection of luxury and natural-fiber fabrics of all kinds.
That is their specialty.

Britex is a store where there are fabrics in cases up to the ceiling,
accessible only by ladder, piled deep on tables, in compartments under the
tables, and all over the place. The salespeople are eager to help. 
But don't expect them to have a clue what you mean if you ask for a fabric
from some historic era. I once asked a salesperson to help me find an early
19th-century-style embroidered muslin-like fabric, and she proudly dug out a
lovely sheer white cotton--with big kittens embroidered all over it.
However, once I suggested floral sprigs, specifically, she located a number
of others, and I bought one that was very appropriate.

You actually don't really need the salespeople at all if you are willing to
climb ladders, etc. But they don't really like you to, so you have to be
furtive.

As for the stores catering to drag queens--not unless you want to buy things
like cheap, extremely glittery lame, and huge, brightly colored feather
boas.

Fran
Lavolta Press Books on Historic Costuming http://www.lavoltapress.com
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