The quilt top cupboard


4
Aug 11

More Double Wedding Rings…

 

Today I’m pulling another Double Wedding Ring from the quilt top cupboard.

I’m the one that pieced it.  I didn’t have a destination in mind for it when I made it, I just wanted to try the pattern, so it hasn’t been quilted. 

As you can see by the colors, I made it in the 1990′s when there were a lot of Amish inspired quilts being made.

I’d like to quilt this one. but now I’m thinking it would be a good idea to add another row to the width?  It was made for a full sized bed, and I’m finding that a lot people have Queen sized beds..or larger!  I have a large baggie with extra pieces.  I cut too many, which I do sometimes.  It gives me more options for choosing the pices as I sew them together…BUT  I’m not sure I have more of that same black?  I could applique the edges to a solid of some color and have straight edged borders? I’m undecided..so back in the cupboard it goes..to age a bit.  ;)

This is the only photo I have of the top and it looks a bit washed out?  In real life it’s much richer.

Here’s a version of a Double Wedding Ring I made for a girl my older son was dating several years ago.  She was a sweet girl and came over to walk my dog every day when I had surgery and wasn’t able to do it.

She had some “family issues” and felt a bit lost sometimes.  We had a lot of talks.

She had a love for all things Celtic and I thought if I pieced the arcs with a solid black the pattern might have a Celtic knot feel?

I quilted a message into the corner of the quilt, then whipped embroidery floss around the stitches so the words showed up better.  I don’t know if that method  has a name..but it worked well.  I also quilted in a spider web in the corner of one of the larger areas.  The others have a Celtic knot/floral design.   In Victorian times spider webs were added to crazy quilts quite often.  They were thought to be like a dream catcher and were good luck symbols.

The  message says:

If you’re feeling lonely, or if you’re feeling sad, just wrap yourself inside your quilt, and things won’t be as bad.  No matter where you go in life, no matter what you feel, this quilt will be here for you, it’s something that is real.


27
Jul 11

Double Wedding Ring quilt

 

 

Today’s quilt top cupboard offering is a Double Wedding Ring quilt.  It’s the  ”sister quilt” to the Joseph’s Coat quilt I posted last week.   It was aquired at the same garage sale, and was also made by Henrietta King.

The quilt is hand pieced and hand quilted with cotton batting.  The quilt dates to 1930′s-40′s and is pieced from cotton scraps and a good quality muslin.

The pieces may have been  the scraps from making clothing, but they may have been purchased as scraps from Sears or Montgomery Ward’s by mail order?  Both companies sold nice quality cotton scraps for just pennies a pound.  I can  imagine how excited the ladies were to have the parcel they had ordered arrive!

The quilt is in good condition, having been “packed away for years”.  It doesn’t appear to have been used very much before being packed away?

The quilt has a scalloped edge, which is common to the Double Wedding Ring pattern.

The quilting design is very much like a Celtic Knot in the large space and has a cross-hatching over the rest of the quilt.

This pattern was very popular at the time it was made, and the pattern remains popular to this day.  Most quilt collectors have at least one Double Wedding Ring quilt in their collections.

I’m usually drawn to the more unusual versions/colors of the pattern myself.

I’ve included the last pic for those of you who like to see a bit more of the vintage fabrics.  : )

 

 

Please note:  Since I changed blog themes the comment icon is now located above the post rather than after, like it used to be.  I don’t know why…it makes it kind of confusing!


20
Jul 11

Joseph’s Coat Quilt

Today I’m pulling a Joseph’s Coat Quilt from the quilt top cupboard.  It’s also known as a Tea Leaf pattern.  It dates to the early 1940′s and was made by Hennrietta King.  This version is done by piecing, but it’s commonly done by appliqueing the leaves onto a background.

One of the fabrics was a stripe on a white background and it has an unusual look compared to the other pieces.

The quilt is hand quilted and has a scalloped edge.

I recently found this quilt at a local garage sale.  It was being sold by the daughter of the quilt’s maker.  She thought it was odd that I wanted the name of the quilter, but when I explained that I like to have that sort of info so I can keep it with the quilt for future reference, she gave me the name.  I told it would be a shame if her Mother’s nice work was just annonymous.

I bought a “sister” quilt at the same time.  It has some of the same fabrics but is a different design.  There are a couple of spots here and there ( me too!) but overall they are in pretty good, usable condition.  The pair cost me $50.  I would spend more than that on just the materials to make a quilt myself, so I thought they were a bargain.  : )


13
Jul 11

Rising Star Quilt

In May of this year I posted quilt blocks that I bought online.  They were very soiled and poorly constructed.  When I took them apart I found that the quilter who pieced them hadn’t cut and sewn the pices accurately.  I decided to make some paper pieces and baste them in the English Paper Piecing style, so I’d get uniform pieces/blocks.

I had to edit out quite a bit, but I was able to save enough to keep the original “flavor” of the blocks.  I hand stitched the blocks together and added a narrow indigo blue border followed by a double pink, and then an indigo binding.  It ended up 34.5″ x41″.

As I worked on the quilt I found optical illusions that changed depending how I looked at it.

I saw light backgrounds with pink and blue stars…

dark backgrounds with pink and white stars…

and pink backgrounds with blue and white stars.  I also saw what looked like Tumbling Blocks that would appear and disappear.  It’s a fun design!  I quilted it by “stitching in the ditch” rather than 1/4″ away from seam lines like originally thought I would.  I was afraid I’d get a “tent” in the centers.  The border has a simple cable design.

I had a few more pieces left that I didn’t want to waste, so I’m piecing some Tumbling Blocks and will either applique them onto a background or make another small piece? 

This was a fun little change…and has one of my all time favorite color combos.  I love double pink!  : )

 

 

 


25
May 11

Antique applique block- Currents and Coxcomb

Today instead of pulling something from the quilt top cupboard, I’m going to show you what I found at a couple of garage sales I went to on Saturday.

One of the sales was at the home of an elderly couple.  I always like to look at the  linens and this sale had quite a few.   I saw embroidered dresser scarves and pillow cases, along with many crocheted doilies.  Then I saw a very soiled piece of fabrac that was neatly folded.

I opened the fabric out and my heart nearly skipped a beat when I saw this beautiful appliqued block.  The stitches were tiny and tight, and I thought the design was beautiful.  I could picture a quilt made from these blocks.  With the gentle curve of the stems of berries a quilt made from blocks like this would look like they were dancing across the quilt…square dancing style?  I really like it!

I didn’t see a price on the block though.  I asked how much they were asking and the lady came over to look at the block.  She said..”oh I didn’t mean to put that out for the sale…it’s so old and dirty!  I found it when I was going through things. 

If you want it..you can have it.” 

Then she called her husband over and said “look honey.  I think this is a quilt block your Mom made years ago?”  He came over and we chatted a bit.

He said his Mother’s name was Cora Jordon and was born in the 1880′s.  She had two sisters, Nora and Dora.  He thought it was funny that they all had names that rhymed. 

I don’t know much about geneology, but it might be fun to try to look the family tree up sometime? 

The block is hard to date.  The green looks like it might be an over dyed  blue?  Years ago indigo prints were dyed with chrome yellow to create the green color.  There are a couple of blue streaks in the green here and there, which is common with over dyed fabrics.  The style dates to a time that’s earlier than Cora’s birth.  Maybe it was made by her Mother or made from fabrics that had been handed down?  The block is 17.5″ square.

I also picked up a book that looked like a fun read to go along with the anniversary of the start of the Civil War and the blocks that Barbara Brackman is posting each week.  It’s based on the diary postings of a young woman who lived at the time.

I got an envelope of Confederate money too.  Not real money, but replica’s that are made to look and feel old, by the Smithsonian museum.  Fun to look at.

After the South ceded from the North the Confederate government began to issue money from the first capital in Montgomery in 1861. Later, individual Southern states, banks, municipalities, and associations all printed their own money. 

The first Confederate money demonstrated engraving and printing of the highest quality, and many of the notes were beautifully designed. Many issues contained portraits of Southern heroes, while others were of mythological deities, such as Ceres, goddess of agriculture.  Other drawings showed business activities, including picking cotton and steamboating.

By the end of 1864 nearly 2 billion dollars worth of currency had been printed.

The need for speed and the shortage of proper paper stock eventually resulted in lowered quality of the currency.  To reduce costs, most of the issues were not printed on the reverse side. The South’s impending defeat along with excessive printing of the currency resulted in its rapid depreciation.

UPDATE: Ady sent me a note that this block looks like a Coxcomb and Currents pattern she has.  I looked at the book I have here about that pattern, but it’s different.  A search online found a pattern very similar to this one that dates to the 1850′s…so now we have a name.  Thanks for telling me Ady!