Showing posts with label Antique Quilts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antique Quilts. Show all posts

Thursday, September 19, 2013

What is on the inside....


Over time if you asked this as a question - "what is inside?" the responses would vary.
I asked this the other day in a round about way and the response I got was a brand name.
Today, most would answer with perhaps cotton, bamboo, wool etc, that the inside was the batting or wadding.

But what about the other 'inside'. The inside of discovery, the inside of necessity or scarcity?
The stories of pioneering women who had to fill their quilts with leaves or corn husks to provide some protection from the cold. The scarcity of fabrics due to the taxes and regulations imposed by the mother country of England to protect their own industries and to stifle any that would start in the new world. That inside was a matter or life or death as the bitter winters froze many to their ends.

I was fiddling with a quilt the other day that I picked up last year on my way driving from San Fran to LA.
I love to stop here and there and take the back roads through the towns. The scenery is stark and the climate is dry and hot.


This quilt was heavy and a bit out of character but I loved the prints in it and bought it and stuffed it in the back of the SUV along with everything else. By this stage on my journey the car was getting very full.

So last week I snipped out some of the ties and started to take the backing off and what did I find inside but a very old, very worn turkey red and homespun check quilt. I haven't taken any more apart yet as I have a think about what to do next.



But to ask this in another way, the emotional way. What is inside? The feelings the efforts, the memories that the quilt holds.
I want to share with you this statement.  Marguerite Ickis, who you might know as the author of the 'Standard Book of Quilt Making and Collecting' that was first published in 1949 documented this quote from her great grandmother.
For me, this sums up what is inside…

"It took me more than twenty years, nearly twenty five, I reckon, in the evening after supper when the children were all put to bed. My whole life was in that quilt. It scares me sometimes when I look at it. All my joys and all my sorrows are stitched into those little pieces. When I was proud of the boys and when I was down-right provoked and angry with them. When the girls annoyed me or when they gave me a warm feeling around my heart. And John too. he was stitched into that quilt and all the thirty years we were married. Sometimes I loved him and sometimes I sat there hating him as I pieced the patches together. So they are all in that quilt, my hopes and fears, my joys and sorrows, my loves and hates. I tremble sometimes when I remember what that quilt knows about me." *

I just wish I had a photo of this quilt to share with you, I would love to see it. But I imagine many past quilts would hold this emotion in the patches and the stitches. Perhaps it was a quilt like this?
Sunburst - 1840 - Rhea Goldman Gallery
It also shows how quilt making has changed over the decades, or even in larger chunks of time of the centuries.
Today we make quilts with a different perspective as we are now in yet another century. One that is dominated by technology. Where ideas and patterns can be accessed in an instant. Fabrics purchased in abundance of choice and quantity at the click of a mouse and delivered to your door.  New tools and methods for speed and accuracy have taken on a whole new way of 'making'.  Instead of twenty five years its now often a day to turn around a quilt. It is a new era as 'modern' quilt makers now take the stage. 
But as history repeats itself, the quilt makers of the nineteenth century thought the ones of the twentieth century were the modern makers.  As the new century dawned and between the wars and the great depression tastes changed and society placed different demands on women creating a different perspective on the quilt.  I wonder what the quilt makers of the 1700s or1800s would think of it all now? Or what is now on the 'inside'?

*Quote taken from America's Quilts and Coverlets by Carelton L. Stafford and Robert Bishop. Weathervane Books New York 1972

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Open Drawer Camberwell for June

Hi all, you will find me and some of my goodies at Open Drawer in Camberwell over this June. Wednesday, Thursday and maybe Friday depending on clients in my graphic design side of things - I think I need to clone myself some days!

I will also be holding some mini work shops on Scrap Quilting old school style.
So all you need to do is bring a needle and thread, some scissors and a bag of your scraps. You know, all those bits you can't part with but don't know what to do with....yes, we all have loads of them - well I do.
The workshop will take you through string style piecing using what you have at hand and some colour theory so you can push your scraps about a bit.

Come on down!

Open Drawer is at 1158 Toorak Road in Camberwell (Hartwell Village)
You can get the 75 tram to the front door or the Alamein Train to Burwood Station.


1940s string pieced diamond block. www.thequilter.com

Friday, November 25, 2011

Sneak Peak of Some New Product

Here are some of the samples of new product. Made from 1920s to 1940s fabrics and hand quilted. Backed with antique ticking from the USA and France or 1940s muslin and buttoned with antique mother of pearl buttons or piped in signature red and white stripes.  

My other range is 'For the boys', military, naval and hunting novelty fabrics from the 1950s and 1960s, piped in jumbo signature red and white and backed with assorted vintage tickings and checks. Hand Packed Feather inserts. Limited numbers available. 

I only do a maximum of 12 of any design if the fabric permits. Some are one offs. 

A selection of both ranges is available from Bally Hoo Art in Geelong and Tangled up in Blue in Seddon. A small range will be available from me at Daylesford Market, 27th November, Design Exchange in Ballarat on the 11th December and Yarraville on the 17th December.

Ottoman/Floor Cushions $139, Small Cross Cushion $89, Large Cross Cushion $119, A Patchy Scarf $85 (All scarves are sold out), Table Runners $129
Strip Bars Quilt 1920s to 40s fabrics $490

'For the Boys' Luxury Cushions - Small $89, Medium $110, Jumbo $149 (Coats of Arms and Anchor are Sold Out).
Hand Packed Feathers.

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Some more Quilts

I am loving these quilts, they are so lovely, unique, pretty, useful, delightful and just plain wonderful.
Nice and warm and thick and some over 100 years old. Its a tribute to the ladies who made them and to good old fashioned quality. Fabrics are just not the same these days.
I am unpacking more over the next few days, I still get surprised when I open them up and roll out.

1800's Bow Tie Quilt 

1930's Crazy Quilt from Feedsacks


1920's to 1940s Fabrics Multipatch Quilt

1940's Tulip Crosses Quilt

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Vintage and Antique Quilts have arrived

It is with much excitement that I share with you some of my new shipment of vintage and antique quilts from the USA. 
They are so lovely and beautiful. There is something so wonderful about the fabrics and the hand stitching. I cannot start to describe just how wonderful they are. Original feed sack quilts, some still with their labels on. Ones with the newspaper backings still intact from the 1940's, ones with Civil war era fabrics. The history and the time and love taken to make these, ones with snippets of clothes and what ever fabrics could be found during lean times. These are all in wonderful condition, many unused.
I also have many 100's of hand stitched blocks in various patterns if you wish to piece together your own quilt and plenty of fabrics you can use as well. I will photograph the fabrics later.
Trust me, I am keeping many quilts for myself, these ones are available for you to purchase at my next few markets.
I will also have credit card facilities from now on.


1930's Rayon tucked postage stamp quilt SOLD
Crazy quilt top with feedsacks and 30s and 40s fabrics SOLD
1930s quilt, thick combed cotton filling
1950s graphic quilt top
1930's graphic dishes quilt top
1940s to 1960s fabrics string quilt
1930s railroad blocks quilt
1930s stepped blocks quilt SOLD
close up of some of the fabrics in the 2 quilts above.
1930's improved 9 patch king size quilt top SOLD
1940's turkey red and white windmill quilt top

1960s trip around the world quilt top 
1950s and 60s tumbler quilt top

1920s to 1940s log cabin quilt SOLD
civil war era fabrics to 1930's railway blocks quilt top
1930s to 40s quilt top
40s to 60s quilt top, unusual patterns
1930's feed sacks and 40s fabrics quilt top, with labels and newspaper backings, dated 1949, mixed patterns and quilt blocks

1920s to 30s feedsack quilt top, broken dishes pattern - SOLD
1930s fabrics puff ball quilt