Can Anyone Date Fabric?
#1
Can Anyone Date Fabric?
I was given a wonderful gift from a dear customer this week. She gave me 39 hand pieced blocks that are made of vintage fabric. They don't look much like any of the reproductions that I carry in my store, and I've yet to find any like them in any catalogs.
Is there any members who might be willing to date some fabric for me if I were to scan some of the blocks and attach them to this discussion?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Tammi Jo Wilson
Is there any members who might be willing to date some fabric for me if I were to scan some of the blocks and attach them to this discussion?
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Tammi Jo Wilson
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 07-20-2012 at 02:33 PM. Reason: remove advertising
#4
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Piedmont Virginia in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mtns.
Posts: 8,562
I believe your blocks/fabrics are mostly from the end of the 1880s-early 1900s, and here's why........
"Quilts from 1880-1910 were often dark overall. Because the predominant colors were black, dark blue, deep red, brown and claret, the quilts were usually quite subdued. Utility quilts were often patterned with simple geometrics, large scale blocks, and wide sashings. There was a temporary fad of collecting collecting fabrics for one-patch quilt designs in which no two fabrics were alike, today referred to as charm quilts.....Black grounds with white discharge (bleached out) prints were popular and were usually listed [in sales catalogs] as mourning prints. Cadet blue (a misty blue) was often printed in combination with black or white. It is a distinctive color for this period because it was not used before 1880. It was vat dyed and was therefore equally blue on both sides of the fabric. Ginghams, checks, houndstooth, plaids, and stripes reminiscent of ticking were offered in catalogs. Cotton prints of this time were notorious for being thin, like cheesecloth."
from DATING FABRICS: A COLOR GUIDE 1800-1960 by Eileen Jahnke Trestain 1998 American Quilter's Society
Jan in VA
"Quilts from 1880-1910 were often dark overall. Because the predominant colors were black, dark blue, deep red, brown and claret, the quilts were usually quite subdued. Utility quilts were often patterned with simple geometrics, large scale blocks, and wide sashings. There was a temporary fad of collecting collecting fabrics for one-patch quilt designs in which no two fabrics were alike, today referred to as charm quilts.....Black grounds with white discharge (bleached out) prints were popular and were usually listed [in sales catalogs] as mourning prints. Cadet blue (a misty blue) was often printed in combination with black or white. It is a distinctive color for this period because it was not used before 1880. It was vat dyed and was therefore equally blue on both sides of the fabric. Ginghams, checks, houndstooth, plaids, and stripes reminiscent of ticking were offered in catalogs. Cotton prints of this time were notorious for being thin, like cheesecloth."
from DATING FABRICS: A COLOR GUIDE 1800-1960 by Eileen Jahnke Trestain 1998 American Quilter's Society
Jan in VA
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Missouri
Posts: 4,061
This looks like a utilitarian quilt made from scraps of fabrics and pieces of fabrics from shirts worn in the 1940's to 1960s. It looks very similar to one my great-grandmother made during that time .... just a thought, I'm no expert in this field.
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