Where's My Muslin?! A Globe-Trotting Fabric Quest
A globe-trotting guide for the chronically fabric-obsessed.
Let's be honest. You didn't plan to need muslin today. You just wanted to sew one little thing, and now your brain has informed you — with great urgency — that you cannot proceed without a toile, a mock-up, a "let me just test this pattern before I butcher my good fabric" safety net.
And so begins the eternal quest: where on this spinning marble do you actually buy muslin?
Pull up a chair, pour yourself something warm, and let's take a world tour of muslin acquisition. Passport not required. Sense of humour strongly recommended.
Where Muslin Goes by Its Stage Name
First, a vocabulary warning, because Canada loves a vocabulary warning. In Canada (and the U.S.), "muslin" often refers to that classic plain-woven cotton you make test garments out of. But wander into a fabric shop and ask, and you may get a thoughtful pause, because we also call it cotton broadcloth, unbleached cotton, or simply "that cheap stuff at the back."
- Fabricland — the spiritual home of the Canadian sewist. Wait for a sale, because there is always a sale, and the "regular price" is a mythical creature no one has actually paid.
- Local quilt and fabric shops — pricier, but the staff actually know what a toile is and won't look at you like you've sneezed in Latin.
- Online: The Workroom and The King Textiles in Toronto, Cloth Castle in Victoria, Blackbird Fabrics, and ... Amazon.ca for when you need it yesterday.
· · ·Muslin Means Something Completely Different, Babes
Brace yourself. In Britain, "muslin" usually conjures up the soft, gauzy cloth you wrap a newborn in or drape over a Christmas pudding. Walk into a shop asking for muslin to make a toile and you'll get a kindly, confused smile.
What you actually want is calico. Yes. Calico. The very word that means "busy floral print" in North America means "plain unbleached cotton for mock-ups" in the UK. Linguistics is a prank.
- Minerva and Croft Mill — beloved online institutions with proper calico in every weight.
- Fabric markets (Walthamstow, anyone?) where you can haggle gently and walk away with a bolt for the price of a sandwich.
- John Lewis if you're feeling fancy and want a receipt you can frame.
Ask for "calico" and watch the shopkeeper's relief wash over them like a warm cuppa.
Same Word, Different Hemisphere, Equal Chaos
Australia leans British on the terminology, so once again you're after calico, not muslin (muslin there is also the baby-wrap, pudding-straining variety). Consistency within the Commonwealth! How refreshing.
- Spotlight — the big-box craft cathedral. Get a membership card; the non-member prices are a cautionary tale.
- Lincraft — Spotlight's slightly quieter sibling.
- The Remnant Warehouse (online, Sydney-based) for bulk calico without the in-store fluorescent-lighting interrogation.
Heads up: order quantities are in metres, the weather will not affect your fabric but will affect your motivation, and shipping across that enormous country can take a hot minute.
Muslin, Loud and Proud
Finally, a country that calls muslin "muslin" and means the same thing you do. America: where the terminology is correct and the bolt sizes are enormous.
- JOANN — the dependable workhorse (just don't ask about the corporate drama; they've been through it). Coupons are basically currency here. Never, ever pay full price.
- Hobby Lobby — also stocks it, with that famous weekly 40%-off coupon energy.
- Online: Fabric.com's ghost lives on in places like Dharma Trading, Big Z Fabric, and — say it with me — Amazon.
You'll find muslin in bleached, unbleached, and a range of weights from "whisper" to "could survive a hurricane." Buy more than you think you need. You always need more.
Where Muslin Becomes a Whole Aesthetic

Ah, la France. Here, "mousseline" exists and is gorgeous and gauzy — but the plain cotton you sew a toile from is, fittingly, called toile (specifically toile à patron or coton à toile). The French invented the word toile for mock-ups, so really, everyone else is just borrowing their homework.
- Mondial Tissus — the big national chain, reliable and everywhere.
- Les Coupons de Saint-Pierre and the legendary Marché Saint-Pierre in Paris — multiple floors of fabric, mild chaos, and the distinct possibility of buying things you cannot explain later.
- Online: Tissus.net and Ma Petite Mercerie for when you'd rather not battle for parking.
A gentle warning: French fabric shops close for lunch with the solemnity of a religious observance. Show up at 12:45 and you will be politely, firmly, deux heures-ed.
The Universal Truths of Muslin Buying
- You will buy too little. Then you'll go back. Then you'll buy too much. There is no in-between.
- The cheapest option is always at the bottom shelf, requiring a deep knee-bend and the dignity of someone rummaging for a dropped earring.
- The good stuff is on sale exactly one week after you paid full price. This is not a coincidence. It is a cosmic law.
- Pre-wash it. Yes, even the toile. Future-you, watching your test garment shrink into doll clothes, will thank present-you.
Now go forth, make your mock-up, and remember: it's not "wasting fabric," it's insurance. The good silk sleeps easy because the humble muslin took the bullet first. 🧵
