Go Back  Quiltingboard Forums >
  • Main
  • Surprise on a quilt >
  • Surprise on a quilt

  • Surprise on a quilt

    Thread Tools
     
    Old 08-08-2016, 03:23 PM
      #1  
    Super Member
    Thread Starter
     
    leonf's Avatar
     
    Join Date: May 2016
    Location: near Topeka kansas
    Posts: 4,524
    Default Surprise on a quilt

    I was visiting on Sunday and got to see a quilt. Badly neglected, stuffed in a box in a barn. Mouse visited. you know the story. But the owners were pleased to tell me what they knew of it. Decorations, family Initials and names. It was really pretty sad. But then I saw a date stitched into it. Feb. 29, 1896. Wow, my grandmother's birthday. Nice reminder of a long gone lady.
    leonf is offline  
    Old 08-08-2016, 03:31 PM
      #2  
    Super Member
     
    Join Date: Apr 2016
    Location: Blue Ridge Mountians
    Posts: 7,075
    Default

    quilts talk to people, no matter what condition they are in. Sounds like you had an unforgettable Sunday.
    Jane Quilter is offline  
    Old 08-08-2016, 03:31 PM
      #3  
    Super Member
     
    ILoveToQuilt's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Mar 2010
    Location: New Hampshire & Maine
    Posts: 3,300
    Default

    It saddens me to see these works of art so neglected. I go to a local Goodwill store and I can't tell you the number of quilts (feed sacks, 30's fabric, crazy quilts and new ones -I recognize some of the fabrics in them) that people give away. Same with hand knit and crocheted afghans. I try to "rescue" those quilts which can still be repaired. I am a firm believer in that every quilt tells a story and I always wonder what stories these quilts have to tell. At least they are now in a "loving" home.
    ILoveToQuilt is offline  
    Old 08-08-2016, 05:17 PM
      #4  
    Junior Member
     
    homefrontgirl's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Aug 2016
    Posts: 177
    Default

    It's amazing what textiles can tell us from the past. Your grandma was a leap year baby! What a cool find.

    Anita - I agree with you. I've found such beautiful knitted and crochet afgahns at Goodwill and other thrift stores.
    homefrontgirl is offline  
    Old 08-08-2016, 06:32 PM
      #5  
    Power Poster
     
    Join Date: Jan 2011
    Location: Southern USA
    Posts: 16,165
    Default

    I know why some beautiful crochet items end up at a thrift store. My aunt crochet a baby blanket every week of her last years on earth. She sent dozens to my DDs for the babies even after the babies were in school. They brought them to me, they had more then enough, their friends had enough, the church nursery had enough, everyone we knew had enough. LOL
    Onebyone is offline  
    Old 08-09-2016, 02:14 AM
      #6  
    Power Poster
     
    Join Date: Jun 2011
    Location: Southern California
    Posts: 19,127
    Default

    Too bad this quilt with such a beautiful history has not been taken care of. Sometimes the best suggestion is to cut up the quilt and frame the sections that are still in good condition so that many descendants have a piece of this lovely quilt. This is one of the selction that the author Camille Dalphond Cognac suggestion in her brilliant book Quilt Restoration, A Practical Guide.
    ManiacQuilter2 is offline  
    Old 08-09-2016, 06:12 AM
      #7  
    Super Member
     
    Join Date: Jul 2010
    Location: Flagstaff, Arizona
    Posts: 9,475
    Default

    That story is very sad to me. How wonderful that the date is the birthday of your grandmother. I guess she was talking to you and asking you to save the quilt!
    Jordan is offline  
    Old 08-09-2016, 07:44 AM
      #8  
    Super Member
    Thread Starter
     
    leonf's Avatar
     
    Join Date: May 2016
    Location: near Topeka kansas
    Posts: 4,524
    Default

    Leap year baby indeed. And she didn't get her first birthday till she was 8. They adjusted the calendar in 1900.
    The owner was considering saving the best bits and redoing it. I was just there to buy a Wilson by White. Good day for Whites on Sunday. That Grandma did quilting with her friends at the church on what appeared to be a HUGE frame for an 8 year old.
    Attached Thumbnails white-wilson-shrink.jpg  
    leonf is offline  
    Old 08-10-2016, 02:21 AM
      #9  
    Senior Member
     
    Join Date: Nov 2014
    Location: West Virginia
    Posts: 495
    Default

    I don't think of quilts at the Goodwill store as being abandoned or unloved. They are simply being given a second chance! Why keep something you will not use when others may treasure these items? Many people do not have quilters or crafty people in the family or the money to purchase an item at full value. Better goodwill than the trash.
    Skhf is offline  
    Old 08-10-2016, 08:42 AM
      #10  
    Power Poster
     
    Jingle's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Dec 2009
    Location: Outside St. Louis
    Posts: 38,213
    Default

    When I am gone. I have told my Daughter and Granddaughter to not give them to thrift stores of any kind.
    I want them to go to the needy. Lots of charities that help the needy out.
    Jingle is offline  
    Related Topics
    Thread
    Thread Starter
    Forum
    Replies
    Last Post
    Harmony
    Pictures
    15
    10-30-2012 08:48 AM
    granniebj
    Main
    35
    05-15-2011 05:41 PM
    Lisa T
    Pictures
    88
    07-09-2010 09:11 PM
    Mishi
    Pictures
    21
    04-22-2010 09:56 PM
    Lisa T
    Pictures
    51
    02-17-2009 05:39 AM

    Posting Rules
    You may not post new threads
    You may not post replies
    You may not post attachments
    You may not edit your posts

    BB code is On
    Smilies are On
    [IMG] code is On
    HTML code is On
    Trackbacks are Off
    Pingbacks are Off
    Refbacks are Off



    FREE Quilting Newsletter