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    Old 12-27-2013, 04:05 AM
      #51  
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    it's hard to tell in the pictures but the swastikas really don't even show up unless you get at the right angle with the light hitting them right they are shiny so the light makes them show without light they hide. though out all the years no one had even noticed the swastikas till I saw them a couple months ago by luck.
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    Old 12-27-2013, 04:35 AM
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    What a treasure. Good luck researching its history.
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    Old 12-27-2013, 06:10 AM
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    Originally Posted by phyllis 81 yrs in Oregon
    I believe your quilt to be pre-WW11. The swastika had the arms turned one direction and the Iron Cross had the arms turned the other way. No, I do not know which way for which one.
    The "Grandmother's Fan" quilting pattern was used forever with hand quilting. Just a pencil or piece of chalk with a string tied to it, then knotted at intervals to make the fan spaces. Hold a knot tight against the quilt top, draw a 1/4 circle, then move to the next knot, etc. til you have the fan, quilt, do some more. My Mother used this a lot for "everyday" quilts.
    Well, there you are! I've only had my coffee and I've learned how to quilt this pattern! I never would have thought how to do that... and I love the pattern on a quilt... Thanks Phyllis!!
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    Old 12-27-2013, 08:22 AM
      #54  
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    Welcome Persistent.
    The quilting pattern is now called Baptist Fan. I don't know much about the pattern, but it is similar to our more modern Friendship Star. It should be fun doing a little genealogy search.
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    Old 12-27-2013, 03:46 PM
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    Originally Posted by orangeroom
    Where did you find it? It does look older, but then again, as discussed this morning, I've only been quilting ~10 years. What is the design on the lighter fabric? Swastikas?
    I have a paper framed picture of my grandmother and there is a German Christian Cross on it. It has nothing to do with a Swastika - that was Hitler's decision, not the German Christians. I am 75, my grandmother would probably be around 125-130 now and it was taken around the time she got married. Oh by the way, she was born in Wisconsin.

    It is a beautiful quilt. Edie
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    Old 12-27-2013, 05:24 PM
      #56  
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    Here is a link to a web page with contact info for someone who has made a study of swastika textiles. I haven't tried the phone number, so it may not still be in service. Good luck. http://www.quilthistory.com/98222.htm
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    Old 12-27-2013, 06:34 PM
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    Wow...That is awesome...Can the person that gave it to you help you ?
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    Old 12-28-2013, 06:18 AM
      #58  
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    Originally Posted by mjhaess
    Wow...That is awesome...Can the person that gave it to you help you ?
    sorry but no they told me all the info they knew about it which wasn't much an others that may have known are gone.
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    Old 12-28-2013, 08:09 AM
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    I'd seen this block before and remembered it was called Crossroads so I tracked down some more info. The full name is Crossroads to Bachelor's Hall.
    The pattern was first printed in 1906 in a Clara Stone booklet made available by www.antiquepatternlibrary.org Here is the pdf link. You'll see that on the cover of the booklet is a swastika quilt. Look for quilt #31.
    http://www.antiquepatternlibrary.org...ltPatterns.pdf

    Recent article: http://quiltingpiecebypiece.wordpres...ewold-pattern/

    Detailed article on use of swastika in quilts.
    http://www.quiltersmuse.com/Swastika...he-Design.html

    You'd need an expert in dating fabrics to determine more closely when it was made. I think it looks 1920s. Do you know what year you're great-grandmother was born?
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    Old 12-28-2013, 08:22 AM
      #60  
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    This is an amazing quilt. Love the pieced blocks. I have never seen a swastika print before. It would be interesting to have it dated so you know aprox how old it is.
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