Showing posts with label antique crazy quilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antique crazy quilt. Show all posts

Thursday, March 31, 2022

A "Crazy" Story







When we first started our blog and set up our Through the Needle's Eye website, our hope was to invite others with stories of their quilts to share. In fact, on the home page of our website, there is a form asking you to share stories you may have about your treasures. We were absolutely delighted to receive this email a few weeks ago from Kathleen Barden. Her story was so fascinating that we asked her permission to share it with you. She has kindly accepted our invitation, and thrilled us further by sending pictures. Thank you, Kathleen! And readers—enjoy!!

🧵🧵🧵🧵🧵🧵🧵

The end of the story is that I have three exquisitely embroidered crazy quilt panels with four 12.5-inch blocks in each panel. Plus another four-block panel that lacks embroidery over the joined block seams. Plus eight more 12.5-inch embroidered crazy quilt blocks waiting to be sewn together. Plus two 21-inch blocks with some embroidery and theorem painting in the centers. I believe the blocks may date back to late Victorian times. I'm looking for information about how to honor the history of these blocks while creating a finished quilt. 

The middle of the story is that I have already spent approximately 15 hours removing the three intact, completed panels from a brown Velveteen dress made in the late 60's and worn in a high school student play. She was an excellent seamstress, making fashion forward clothing until a few weeks before she died. 

The beginning of the story is that, for helping a friend downsize her sewing room, she gave me three boxes of her favorite fabrics. She had owned an upscale fabric shop in an exclusive suburban area from the early 1960s to the mid 1990s. As I was in the midst of packing to move as well, I sealed, then labeled the boxes and put them with the others to be moved to my new guest/sewing room. Recently, anticipating overnight guests, I have been cleaning up my sewing room. Stored under the bed were those three boxes. One box contains her favorite blue and white batiks from her travels in Indonesia. Another box is full of glorious yards of jewel-toned silks, satins, taffetas, and velvets. The third box held that dress she'd made for her daughter from parts of a crazy quilt, and all the rest of the intact, leftover crazy quilt blocks. The next chapter is mine to write/sew.



Here are some pictures you might like to use, along with my story. 



One of the lessons learned from all my efforts with this project to date is the critical importance of documentation for everything I do and create. I had a habit of labeling my "really good stuff." Henceforth, everything is getting labeled!


Just in the last two weeks, I "unearthed" an address for one of my benefactor's daughters. She informed me that, also in the mid 1960s, her Mom made a brown velveteen skirt and a vest with crazy quilt blocks for her younger sister. Neither can remember what happened to those garments. They both believe that their Mom either won the blocks in an auction or purchased them in an antique store. Although their Mom had the ability, neither remember her adding any embroidery of her own to the blocks. 

I am more reluctant than I was, to add any details of my own; keeping all that I have original to that talented woman whose name I shall never know but whose work I want to honor. It's becoming an awesome responsibility to own these beautiful pieces of another woman's history. I'm thrilled that her lovely work will live on and be appreciated well after she is gone.

Thank you. I look forward to reading the comments that your followers will add and to learning more about crazy quilting in general.

 ~by Kathleen B. Barden


🧵🧵🧵🧵🧵🧵🧵

If anyone has any information or suggestions for Kathleen as to how she can "honor the history of these blocks while creating a finished quilt," please give her some feedback in the comments below. We would all appreciate any suggestions you might have. Again, many thanks to Kathleen for sharing her story with us all; hopefully, our group effort here can offer her some ideas about how to preserve these treasures.

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Maine Musings and Attic Heirlooms


We are back!

Last week we had to take a little break to work on some of our upcoming deadlines, so our needles were a-flying. Now that we have had a little time to catch up and breath, I (Kara) thought I would share a little bit from my most recent travel adventure.

Normally, our travels take us somewhere in Europe, but this time we headed back across the pond to Maine—one of our favorite places in the world. Our niece was getting married in Boothbay Harbor, and while that was the primary reason for our travel, the picture above was certainly another motivating factor! Of course, we couldn't eat lobster the whole time we were there (although we may have tried); scoping out antique and quilt stores was another activity that occupied our time. I have been to quite a few antique malls, but the Wiscasset Antiques Mall has been hands down the best! It was so clean and nicely laid out, and every booth was like a little vignette. Here are some of the treasures I came across.
A funky chicken!


A sweet little stool cover
I am a sucker for crazy quilts.

This one was a testament to a thorough use of scraps.

Lots of colorful stitching!

Another good use of scraps—this time in wool!

A creative yo yo quilt

I had to resist bringing this lovely rail fence quilt home.

If my suitcase had been bigger, many things in this booth would have come home with me!

This tulip pot quilt was unique.

A beautiful southern belle
Such pretty stitching!

I loved this colorful sampler from 1883.

I fell in love with these two geisha embroideries from the 1970s. They were so well stitched and colorful that I considered buying them. I walked out of the store without them but couldn't stop thinking about how pretty they were. My wonderful husband kindly stopped back on our way to the airport so I could take them home. When things calm down again, I hope to incorporate them into a wall hanging using some different silks to coordinate with the colors.



Any trip to a new place requires a Google search, "quilt shops near me". Attic Heirlooms in Damariscotta was one that popped up. It wasn't just a quilt shop, but a wool shop as well! Of course, it became the main reason for visiting this cute Maine harbor town. I walked in and was warmly greeted by the owner, Trish Harriman.

The lovely Trish!

Attic Heirlooms has items for quilters, wool appliquérs, knitters, cross stitchers, rug hookers, and needle punchers—there is something for everyone! 



Look at all that beautiful wool!!!

There is a wonderful selection of patterns from many different designers, so there is a wide variety to choose from, depending on your taste. Trish herself is a talented designer, creating a fun Ornament of the Month program in addition to her other designs. If you happen to be in Damariscotta, Maine, Attic Heirlooms is a MUST stop, but if you can't get there in person, you can order directly from their website HERE

I love Maine and look forward to getting back up there, not just for the lobster rolls, but now for a little wool shopping and antiquing as well. My one regret from this trip was not being able to get together with Wendy Reed of the Constant Quilter. Alas, family commitments didn't leave me as much time as I had hoped. That just gives me more reason to head back up there!


Monday, December 31, 2018

Happy New Year!



We wish you a new year fill with all things good—
family, friends, health, peace, 
needles, thread, fabric, ribbons, beads, and pretty scissors!


Thursday, August 23, 2018

Birmingham Festival of Quilts—British Quilt Study Group

What a whirlwind two weeks it has been for Teri and me! We hit the ground running at the Birmingham Festival of Quilts and didn't stop until Teri hopped on a plane to return home. With all that activity behind us—trips to France, castles, and cathedrals—posting about the amazing quilts we saw at the quilt show is now possible. There were so many wonderful quilts, that it would be challenging to show them all in one post. Today's quilts are from the exhibit hosted by the British Quilt Study Group (BQSG), while some of the other quilts from the festival will have to wait for another time.

The BQSG began in 1998, and you can read more about their aim and purpose here. Of course, any time there is an exhibit of antique quilts, Teri and I make a beeline for it, and this one did not disappoint! Here is a gallery of just some of the splendid quilts from the past and a little information from the display about them.

Whole Cloth Quilts

Red wholecloth quilt, circa 1900.

Detail: red wholecloth quilt.

White wholecloth quilt, circa 1920-30.

Detail: white wholecloth quilt.

Blue wholecloth quilt, circa 1920-30
This quilt was quilted in the "Hawick Style," which included motifs such as thistle,
hearts with spiky-leafed centers, and daisies, 

The thistle motif.



Crazy Quilts

The level of detail in this crazy quilt is fantastic!
The Seward Wall Hanging, circa 1889
This quilt was made by an invalid, Emily Seward, who passed away at the age of 29.

Center with signature of maker.
Very detailed dancers.

The shading on the lions mane is perfect!

This quilt was a history lesson in and of itself!

 Crazy quilt, circa 1900
Made by Mrs. R. Ruttle

What a clever way to make this posy.
We can't wait to try these flowers!

Another spectacularly embroidered crazy quilt!

The maker of this quilt used the smallest scraps to create this masterpiece.

What a creative way to use a Log Cabin square.

Center medallion



Signature Quilt

Bratton Baptist Church Bazaar Coverlet, circa 1913
Made by the members of the church to raise funds.

Detail of a few of the 270 squares.



Patchwork Quilt

This patchwork quilt, circa 1800-20, is pieced with four different sizes of half-square triangles.

Some of the scraps in the center are from the late 18th century!

Finding out how to become a member
We had such a wonderful time examining these beautiful examples of Britain's quilt history. The members supporting the exhibit were so helpful and willing to share their knowledge and passion. Who made the quilt? What was going on in society at the time the quilt was made? How old is the quilt? Why were those fabrics used? These are just some of the questions asked by those whose research and dedication allows the stories of these quilts and others to be brought to light and shared with the world.



Do you have a passion for old quilts and their stories? No matter which side of the pond you live, there is a quilt study group for you. To join the British Quilt Study Group click here and to join the American Quilt Study Group click here.