I always love to see a quilt with vintage repairs. Well, I've maybe coined a new term! What I mean is that the quilt has been patched in the past by other folks who cared for it. Vintage repairs speak volumes about how much history and love and meaning quilts can carry.
So here's an example of a cheerful quilt with vintage repairs that just visited my studio.
October 31, 2016
October 21, 2016
Women's Rights Quilt
I was just browsing through the Met Museum quilt collection and happened upon this quilt. Boy, did I get excited!
Just to toot my own horn a tiny bit: When I first started teaching quilting in the early 1980s with little 6-week beginner classes, one of my students brought in an old quilt that was in her family. I didn't know then nearly what I know now about quilt history, but I knew enough to be utterly amazed and urged the owner to treat it like the incredible piece that it is. It did get exhibited and then published a couple of times (including in one of my all-time favorite books, Hearts and Hands: Women, Quilts, and American Society by Elaine Hedges, Pat Ferrero and Julie Silber, Quilter's Digest Press, 1987). And now, oh boy oh boy, I see it's become part of the collection at the Met!!! I feel like the beaming godmother!
The quilt was made in Illinois c. 1875. It has both botanic appliqué designs and unique and detailed pictorial blocks showing the social history of the time. There are some pictures that refer to the Civil War and some to the question of women's rights that sprouted during the war years. Along with the quilt, the family had a piece of paper with captions and sometimes comical commentary for the pictorial blocks. Such an incredible treasure!
You can read more and take a closer look at the Met collection entry. The quilt is also described on the Quaker Quilts page in an article titled "Quaker Causes and the Women's Rights Quilt."
Enjoy!
Photo: Hearts and Hands: Women, Quilts, and American Society, 1987. |
Just to toot my own horn a tiny bit: When I first started teaching quilting in the early 1980s with little 6-week beginner classes, one of my students brought in an old quilt that was in her family. I didn't know then nearly what I know now about quilt history, but I knew enough to be utterly amazed and urged the owner to treat it like the incredible piece that it is. It did get exhibited and then published a couple of times (including in one of my all-time favorite books, Hearts and Hands: Women, Quilts, and American Society by Elaine Hedges, Pat Ferrero and Julie Silber, Quilter's Digest Press, 1987). And now, oh boy oh boy, I see it's become part of the collection at the Met!!! I feel like the beaming godmother!
The quilt was made in Illinois c. 1875. It has both botanic appliqué designs and unique and detailed pictorial blocks showing the social history of the time. There are some pictures that refer to the Civil War and some to the question of women's rights that sprouted during the war years. Along with the quilt, the family had a piece of paper with captions and sometimes comical commentary for the pictorial blocks. Such an incredible treasure!
You can read more and take a closer look at the Met collection entry. The quilt is also described on the Quaker Quilts page in an article titled "Quaker Causes and the Women's Rights Quilt."
Enjoy!
October 10, 2016
Mending, Mending, Mending
Well, if you have visited my blog before, you know that what I do is a whole lot of mending. For those of you are who new here, my profession is repairing antique/vintage quilts and clothing. For example:
I mended this unfortunate tear in a mid-19th century tulip appliqué quilt.
I replaced missing beading on a gorgeous wedding dress.