Update: offcuts and scraps are now available in limited quantities in the shop on a trial basis.

I have a lot of fabric pieces that aren’t useful to me but they could be useful to someone else – things like irregularly shaped off-cuts, end-of-the-roll pieces that are too small to use in a packraft kit, and fabric with manufacturing defects that I can’t work around. These are generally less than 1 m (1-3 feet) long and irregularly shaped. They could be useful for making smaller packrafting or camping accessories like drybags, attachment points, backpacks, collapsible sinks, and so on.

Occasionally I get an email from someone asking to purchase fabric pieces like these, and you might think that’s a perfect product-market fit – but what inevitably happens is that I get into an email back-and-forth with each person, figuring out what they want and what I can offer, and that takes so long I’d have to charge them an unreasonable price to make it worth my time.

I’ve considered various ways of dealing with this, and the only one I think might work efficiently would be to sell fabric scraps by weight. The customer could choose the type of fabric (e.g. 250 GSM packraft tube fabric, 450 GSM packraft floor fabric, etc.) and then each unit would be 1 kg (2.2 pounds) of fabric, so you could choose how many kilograms of fabric you want and I’d just grab enough pieces to make up that weight. (Example: 1 kg of 250 GSM fabric is 4 square meters – just divide 1000 grams per kilogram by 250 grams per square meter to get the number of square meters.) I’d start with the largest piece I have under that weight, and then make up the balance with smaller pieces.

The obvious downside of this approach is that you as a customer wouldn’t be able to choose the size and shape of the pieces, so you’d have to be content with whatever I chose.

In the “order notes” box you could indicate a color preference or minimum size preference, and I’d choose pieces according to those preferences whenever possible, but I wouldn’t always have the perfect piece for you so you might have to splice two pieces together to make your project work. In order to make this worth my time, you wouldn’t be able to email me beforehand to ask about the available sizes and colors – you’d just have to take a gamble.

Setting this up in the shop would take some time, so I’ll only do it if people want it – please leave a comment below if you think it’s a good idea. Also please leave a comment if you have a different idea about how I could make this work efficiently.

If fabric scraps are not something that people want to buy, I will see if a local school or daycare wants them for art projects, because I don’t want to send them to a landfill.

Note: This is just an idea – I do not have a date in mind for when this will be available (it might never be).

Categories: Uncategorized

16 Comments

David Bain · December 18, 2021 at 3:39 pm

Hi Matt. I contacted you back in April regarding obtaining some material. I live in Australia and would be very grateful for 500gms of 250 GMS of any size and colour.

Uncle Fred · October 10, 2021 at 9:52 pm

Hey Matt, could we add fabric by the yard (AKA like Ripstopbytheroll? It would be great to just buy some of this from you that isn’t just scraps, but cut from the roll.

    Matt (Admin) · October 11, 2021 at 10:29 am

    Sorry, I don’t currently have enough fabric to do that.

Allen Chee · August 27, 2021 at 12:18 pm

I’m super interested in getting more fabric as well! Got some ideas I want to try, but the first will hopefully be a bow bag.

Ben Cates · August 4, 2021 at 11:15 pm

This would be an awesome way to try some diy waterproof bikepacking bags for bikerafting

John hoffman · June 21, 2021 at 5:40 pm

Im interested in like 30 sq ft of remnance and a heat gun

Balagan · June 14, 2021 at 12:02 pm

Just received a package of offcuts (two weeks from Canada to Europe) and I’m very happy with fabric. The piece are larger than I was expecting but I guess that’s the luck of the draw. Great service.

Dylan Sutton · June 1, 2021 at 5:49 pm

As another potential international customer I like the options of smaller increments, whether size or weight. FWIW projects I’m looking at are bow bags, floor reinforcement for self-bailer conversion and outfitting for thigh straps so I’d only need small amounts but of multiple different weights.

Aaron · May 25, 2021 at 5:51 am

I think this is a great idea, I could definitely use some extra fabric for drybags.

Thomas · May 20, 2021 at 10:34 pm

I would love to get my hands on some extra fabric. Great idea!

Balagan · May 19, 2021 at 3:34 pm

As a potential overseas customer, I will second the motion for increments smaller than 1 kg. 500 g or thereabouts should keep things simple and you could say this guarantees at least 4 m2 of 115 g/m2, 2.5 of 190 g/m2, 2 of 250 g/m2 and 1 of 450 g/m2 which should be sufficient info for ordering.

This scheme needs to be as simple as possible in order to be workable and I’m not sure that’s compatible with you sorting though your scraps to find the requested size. I’d just have the option of “some of this colour if possible, please”. This is about buying what’s left on your cutting room floor rather after all…

DaMasta · May 17, 2021 at 3:04 am

Hi Matt, this is a great idea and will hopefully raise enough interest. For the smaller projects and/or international orders (shipping, duty) it might be useful if the customers could purchase less fabric, say 0.5kg/unit. In any case, happy to see they wont’ go to a landfill!

    Matt (Admin) · May 17, 2021 at 9:54 am

    Good idea – thanks for the feedback!

      Steve S PDX · May 17, 2021 at 4:19 pm

      I think the 500 gram in an improvement, but since the surface area per order would vary so greatly, I suggest selling different weights in different 100 gram units to bring the areas covered closer to equality.

        Matt (Admin) · May 17, 2021 at 5:01 pm

        Hmm, yeah, I see your point. Maybe selling by area (square meter) would work best, and then I could just weigh the pieces and convert weight to area. That way the customer wouldn’t have to do any math to figure out how much to order to cover a given area.

          Steve S PDX · May 19, 2021 at 9:55 pm

          If selling by area, try to make the price for each fabric proportional to the per yard price of the roll fabric. Otherwise the discount would be widely variable.

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