Antique quilts in my collection: part 4 (finally)
#1
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: SW MI (yes there really is a Kalamazoo)
Posts: 634
Here's the last of the quilts I have photographed this week. Hope you continue to enjoy seeing them.
This is a coverlet made by my great grand mother. I remember it being on my bed as a girl. I always thought of it as a flower garden surrounded by a picket fence.
This is a coverlet made by my great grand mother. I remember it being on my bed as a girl. I always thought of it as a flower garden surrounded by a picket fence.
Very old machine quilted. DD, as a teenager, once took this to a football game without my knowledge. Her rationale was "I picked a tattered one!". Also made by my great grandmother.
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First pair of stars. I still need to finish and quilting and binding this. It's a WIP
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Fourth pair of stars. Instructor said I was "bold" in the choice of fabrics. Took that to mean too much variety. LOL! Sadly, the dark blue center on top is sun faded.
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Double wedding ring top. I hung it against a white quilt back so the colors showed better. Need to finish this someday.
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Grandmother's flower garden my by my great grandmother. I stopped using this after our cats kept upchucking on it!!
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I am considering taking off a half row at either end and rebinding, so as to prevent further deterioration. Any advice?
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Detail of the double wedding ring. All hand pieced. Maker unknown
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Several years ago, I took a week long class at Tennessee Tech. I pieced this quilt. It's a study in stars, using light and dark fabrics to see how your eye perceives them. There are sets of two stars, each pieced in different fabrics. See what your eye picks up
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Final pair of stars. Look quite different? Mostly shadow quilting used. Lots to finish. Maybe this winter!
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In parting, a bear made from an old grandmother's flower garden. Purchased in the hills of Tenn. Wasn't assembled or stuffed. I promised I would finish and give her a good home. She sits on top of my quilt cupboard in the studio. Thanks for sharing my quilts.
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No batting, plain white backing. Summer weight coverlet
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Lots of variety in the alternating patches, lilacs, geraniums, lilies, urns, and baskets.
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Detail of grandmother's flower garden. I love the soft colors! Side edges have the hexagons.
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Second pair of stars. See what the change of light and dark causes your eye to perceive?
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Third pair of same two stars.
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#6
Grandmother's flower garden my by my great grandmother. I stopped using this after our cats kept upchucking on it!!
Now mind you I am not making fun of the quilt. I love it and would give my eye teeth for an antique quilt. But that statement sounds like the quilt made the cats sick. I can hardly type this I am still laughing so hard. Thank you for some humor this morning. I needed it.
Now mind you I am not making fun of the quilt. I love it and would give my eye teeth for an antique quilt. But that statement sounds like the quilt made the cats sick. I can hardly type this I am still laughing so hard. Thank you for some humor this morning. I needed it.
#9
I have looked at all that you have posted. What treasures you have! I especially love the bear. I have an old, old, tatty quilt that my grandmother made, that may be an option for me. :-D
#10
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: SW MI (yes there really is a Kalamazoo)
Posts: 634
Hi Quilter2: Need to think about that. My g-g'mother passed when I was grown, about 1969. She was an amazing woman. Her mother died in birthing her, so she never knew her own mother. After she was married with two children, she was widowed in her 20's. She eventually remarried, had two more children, and that husband was killed in an accident. She raised all four children alone, farming and working where she could. Remember, there was no social network of support then, nor did she have widow's benefits. I wonder how she kept going! In her later years, she kept house for a bachelor farmer, and I enjoyed going there during the summers of my childhood. I learned so much spending time with her. Her name was Mabel, and she always wore an apron. That's where I got my love of aprons. Best guess is that the GFG is about 60 yrs. old. Thanks for your interest.
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