Here's the quilt currently on my work table:
Quite honestly, Grandmother's Flower Garden is not one of my favorite patterns. And I do get quite a few of them coming in for repair, so I spend quite a bit of time looking at them.
If I ever make one, which is not at all likely, it'd be like this one. I like the addition of the tiny diamond paths between the flowers. These hexies are about 7/8" inch on a side, and the piecing and quilting are quite nicely done.
Also, I really love this particular print. Firstly, it's green. And secondly it's got curvey, viney lines. My favorite kind of print in my favorite color!
April 10, 2019
April 1, 2019
A Fun Couple of Weeks
I've had a bit of a lull between repair projects these last couple of weeks, and have been enjoying working on projects that are mostly for me, meaning they mostly don't have anyone waiting at the other end for me to finish them. So relaxing!
Here's what's been on my worktable:
Here's what's been on my worktable:
March 20, 2019
Booming!
My friend Julia of Basya Berkman Vintage (the person who supplies me with all the fun clothes needing creative repair solutions that you see in these posts) has told me that I need to do this bit of shameless self-promotion. This is not in my nature. At all. But I am following Julia's advice.....
Labels:
book on antique quilt care,
quilt repair
March 19, 2019
Buttons in Boxes and Baskets
Well, let's just say that when a button collection gets so big that buying two new storage boxes isn't enough, well then, that is a big button collection. Guess how I know.
Labels:
buttons
March 11, 2019
Recent Vintage Clothing Adventures
There's always something new and interesting when repairing vintage clothes for Rare Jule Vintage! I'm sharing some highlights of the last few months of creative repairing. From buttons (of course there will be buttons!) to darning to alteration to a fun accessory.
Labels:
alterations,
buttons,
fur muff,
fur repair,
vintage clothing
February 25, 2019
Improved 9-Patch
I really enjoyed working on this quilt. It's a kind of quilt that I have dubbed a "quilt-y quilt" - meaning it personifies what lots of folks think an old quilt ought to look like. A traditional pattern, scrappy, cozy and bright.
The pattern is called Improved 9-Patch, and with all the curves and narrow points, probably not a beginner's quilt. The stitching, both the piecing and the quilting, is very well done.
Well at any rate, when I first laid it out to study it and make an estimate, we became friends right away! On top of that, the quilt is still in the family, and the current owner shares info and photos of the maker below.
I thought I'd let this quilt illustrate making fabric selections for repairs. I was pretty pleased with the fabrics I found. Sometimes I'm not quite this pleased, so yes, I am showing off a bit.
February 9, 2019
The Melrose Quilt - Statistics and Stories
A previous post describes the exhibit and events. Links to many chapters chronicling the research process can be found below. I hope you enjoy the saga as much as I enjoyed it!
Here are links to the data. (Depending on your browser and browser settings, you may see the pages here or you may find them in your downloads.)
List of Names on the Quilt - Includes names as written and more complete names when found
Census Records Closest to 1895-1900 - Household members, ages, professions, stories
Census Data Used to Date the Quilt
Summation of Interesting Facts and Stories
Names Listed in Order of Street Name and Number - In case you visit Melrose and want to look for houses where these people lived
Age Chart - Ages from census records closest to 1895-1900
Here are all the previous posts:
Part 1 describes the quilt and the initial research. Part 2 details how I narrowed down the dates, and relates some of the interesting family stories I began finding. Part 3 tells the story of the Phinney, Dyer, and Hersey families. Part 4 has general observations on life in the late 1890s. Part 5 sums up my research. Part 6 shares the first information from librarians and historians in Melrose. I wrote a little aside about the fun of being able to look at original records online. And, since the quilt did initially come to me for repair, and I did eventually stop reading census forms and do the repair work, and wrote up the techniques and choices involved. And then I went back to the research, and continued to find lots of great information. After the events, I described the homecoming experience and the exhibits, and wrote about the little quilt I made that was inspired by the historical quilt. And a very astonishing coincidence with another quilt and a family tree. I was given a photo of one of the people named on the quilt.