quilt ladder - happy!
#31
Was just thinking as I re-read some of the comment here. Do these quilts have labels on them ???? If not do it now...as latter no one will remember....I have so many things from my mother, her mother and her family, that I have no clue of who and what they are......I just stared this month putting tags on things that I know the history of and working on a modest family tree, as I am the last surviving member of my family.....and even thou I am only 65 sometims I have to think hard as to what is what and who is who....
#33
You just gave me a wonderful idea for a birthday present! Put in a call to Dad and am going to ask him to make me one. Then I'll be able to display more than one of Grandma's quilts and some I've made. Yours looks awesome! Enjoy!
#34
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: howell, Mi
Posts: 2,345
Awsome ladder. Your DH did a great job. Those quilts are wonderful. I have one quilt made by my great-grandmother for me when I was born, that would make it 68+ years old. It has been used hard and washed about a million times. It is still going strong. Putting a label on it is a wonderful idea. Thanks
Sue
Sue
#36
The original plan was to put this behind the couch. The couch is angled out from a corner with a dusty plastic tree behind it. (Dated and ycch, I know.) but ... if you put it behind the couch you lose sight of the bottom 2 - 3 rungs so .. it ended up here. The NEXT plan - we'll see how long this takes - is to build TWO of the same type ladder and hinge them on the long sides. This will be put in the corner behind the couch. There are a few more family quilts to be displayed, but this will mainly be for the quilts I've made. Even those that are in progress can go there while they wait to be sandwiched and quilted.
Labels? GREAT idea. My son is 33 and I was telling him about each of these last night - and he had no idea. His 29-year old sister has no clue either.
Refolding for fading - another great idea. When these were in our bedroom that didn't happen, but I knew absolutely nothing about quilts or quilting. Now as an educated person I can do better. I had a few on an old family wooden ladder, but the rest were folded under a bench at the foot of the bed - no direct sunlight.
Thanks for the atta-girls (and atta-husbands) and good advice.
Labels? GREAT idea. My son is 33 and I was telling him about each of these last night - and he had no idea. His 29-year old sister has no clue either.
Refolding for fading - another great idea. When these were in our bedroom that didn't happen, but I knew absolutely nothing about quilts or quilting. Now as an educated person I can do better. I had a few on an old family wooden ladder, but the rest were folded under a bench at the foot of the bed - no direct sunlight.
Thanks for the atta-girls (and atta-husbands) and good advice.
#37
When my mother-in-law was showing me this Sunbonnet Sue - her first quilt - she pointed out each flaw in it. Flaws I couldn't see, of course, but which I'm sure had been pointed out to her by her rather harsh mother. So not only did I learn more about her - which made it a bit easier to understand her, I learned a lesson that helps me today. Flaw? Shmaw! Enjoy the quilt - process and product!
Here's a close up of each one. The amount of quilting interests me - several are tied - the Sunbonnet Sue has very little quilting - this was a first one by a child so that makes sense.
Here's a close up of each one. The amount of quilting interests me - several are tied - the Sunbonnet Sue has very little quilting - this was a first one by a child so that makes sense.
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Hummer Lady
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03-07-2012 11:57 PM