Quilts on hsc/tv
#1
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,018
Quilts on hsc/tv
I was watching one of those home shopping clubs on tv yesterday, something I have not done in many years-was hooked on them at one point in my life....anyway they were showing quilt sets. I was amazed how well done these are made.....and the quilting is all machine done and well done. I was thinking they would be those horrors with the primitive hand quilting, but no these were very modern piecing designs, lovely patterns, lovely colors with shams, bedskirts and drapes to match and the prices were slashed and I was really tempted to buy a "set". It was said they are 100%cotton, lovely back fabric on back, cotton batt......all for less that $100.00. Altho I do not make quilts for others for $$, as I watched this presentation I wondered how one who does that can compete with that price. Like I said, one was such a cute combo of colors/design I was really tempted, then I slapped myself!!!!!!!!!
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 12-29-2012 at 11:00 AM. Reason: not worldwide friendly
#2
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Piedmont Virginia in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mtns.
Posts: 8,562
But, please remember how these are made....often in slave labor camps overseas. The fabrics are knockoffs, the patterns are knockoffs. ALL of this imported quilts business started in the very early 1990s when the Smithsonian Institution SOLD patterns of our heritage quilts - including those of renowned slave quilter Harriette Powers - to an import company who then started mass producing them in very poor quality and selling at ridiculously low prices. Our American heritage art, on the import market, devalued and mass produced!
Karey Bresenham who started the Houston International Quilt Festival, started a petition against this (Oh I can't even think of a word for it!) disaster, demanding that no more such items be sold by the Institute, and took it to Congress, where the heinous action was stopped.
From that point, the overseas manufacturer had to develop their own patterns and print more of their own fabric designs, no longer copying Jinny Beyer's and others designs. Also from that point, slowly the laborers began to improve their quilting skills. But the quality was still not comparable to quilts being produced by individual artists, and their sale continued to devalue to work our quilters are doing in the public's eye.
If we continue to support this particular importing of quilts by buying them or failing to advise others of this travesty of production, then we can not complain when we find it difficult to sell our own work for a fair price.
Jan in VA
Karey Bresenham who started the Houston International Quilt Festival, started a petition against this (Oh I can't even think of a word for it!) disaster, demanding that no more such items be sold by the Institute, and took it to Congress, where the heinous action was stopped.
From that point, the overseas manufacturer had to develop their own patterns and print more of their own fabric designs, no longer copying Jinny Beyer's and others designs. Also from that point, slowly the laborers began to improve their quilting skills. But the quality was still not comparable to quilts being produced by individual artists, and their sale continued to devalue to work our quilters are doing in the public's eye.
If we continue to support this particular importing of quilts by buying them or failing to advise others of this travesty of production, then we can not complain when we find it difficult to sell our own work for a fair price.
Jan in VA
#4
I was watching one of those home shopping clubs on tv yesterday, something I have not done in many years-was hooked on them at one point in my life....anyway they were showing quilt sets. I was amazed how well done these are made.....and the quilting is all machine done and well done. I was thinking they would be those horrors with the primitive hand quilting, but no these were very modern piecing designs, lovely patterns, lovely colors with shams, bedskirts and drapes to match and the prices were slashed and I was really tempted to buy a "set". It was said they are 100%cotton, lovely back fabric on back, cotton batt......all for less that $100.00. Altho I do not make quilts for others for $$, as I watched this presentation I wondered how one who does that can compete with that price. Like I said, one was such a cute combo of colors/design I was really tempted, then I slapped myself!!!!!!!!!
I'm guessing the fabrics are maybe a dollar a yard over yonder (whereever that is) and the labor is less than a dollar an hour.
NOTHING TO COMPARE TO WHAT FOLKS HERE DO!
#5
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Piedmont Virginia in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mtns.
Posts: 8,562
Jan in VA
#6
But, please remember how these are made....often in slave labor camps overseas. The fabrics are knockoffs, the patterns are knockoffs. ALL of this imported quilts business started in the very early 1990s when the Smithsonian Institution SOLD patterns of our heritage quilts - including those of renowned slave quilter Harriette Powers - to an import company who then started mass producing them in very poor quality and selling at ridiculously low prices. Our American heritage art, on the import market, devalued and mass produced!
Karey Bresenham who started the Houston International Quilt Festival, started a petition against this (Oh I can't even think of a word for it!) disaster, demanding that no more such items be sold by the Institute, and took it to Congress, where the heinous action was stopped.
From that point, the overseas manufacturer had to develop their own patterns and print more of their own fabric designs, no longer copying Jinny Beyer's and others designs. Also from that point, slowly the laborers began to improve their quilting skills. But the quality was still not comparable to quilts being produced by individual artists, and their sale continued to devalue to work our quilters are doing in the public's eye.
If we continue to support this particular importing of quilts by buying them or failing to advise others of this travesty of production, then we can not complain when we find it difficult to sell our own work for a fair price.
Jan in VA
Karey Bresenham who started the Houston International Quilt Festival, started a petition against this (Oh I can't even think of a word for it!) disaster, demanding that no more such items be sold by the Institute, and took it to Congress, where the heinous action was stopped.
From that point, the overseas manufacturer had to develop their own patterns and print more of their own fabric designs, no longer copying Jinny Beyer's and others designs. Also from that point, slowly the laborers began to improve their quilting skills. But the quality was still not comparable to quilts being produced by individual artists, and their sale continued to devalue to work our quilters are doing in the public's eye.
If we continue to support this particular importing of quilts by buying them or failing to advise others of this travesty of production, then we can not complain when we find it difficult to sell our own work for a fair price.
Jan in VA
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post