watervole: (Default)
Judith Proctor ([personal profile] watervole) wrote2017-10-26 02:00 pm

Historic quilts

I don't know if any of you are into quilting. I don't do it myself, but my sister, Carolyn,  is an expert quilter.

Even as I collect old dances as well as writing new ones, she collects old quilts as well as making new ones.

She has several interesting ones in her collection, showing a wide range of techniques, and they demonstrate traditional patterns and techniques from different regions.

I've been reading her website the last couple of days, and I've found the descriptions and photos of these historical quilts to be really interesting.

Here's one example. This is a Welsh wholecloth quilt, probably made in the 1930s.




Fascinating design, and worked with a lot of skill.
espresso_addict: Two cups of espresso with star effect on coffee pot (coffee cups)

[personal profile] espresso_addict 2017-10-26 07:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Wow! That's amazing. I hadn't realised the term 'quilting' covered that sort of work.
feng_shui_house: me at my computer (Default)

So many quilts! So little time.

[personal profile] feng_shui_house 2017-10-27 03:35 pm (UTC)(link)
You can have piecework without quilting (fancy Victorian coverlets made entirely of velvets/satins and the like- commonly embroidered and usually with the patches cut in no particular shape- are called 'Crazy quilts' and are almost never actually quilted), (I have seen photos of them made from silk cigar bands and patriotic commemorative ribbons, too)

you can have precisely cut geometric patches which are then sewn together and quilted (what most people think of for the the word 'quilt'),

you can have appliqued pieces of fabric sewn on a base fabric and quilted,

you can have *folded* pieces of fabric with other pieces insert and covered by the fold, and then stitched together, usually without quilting (Cathedral Windows 'quilt' is the one I think of, but there could be more),

You can have *reverse applique* quilts, traditionally made by small tribes/island people in South America, in which solid color fabrics are layered, cut through, and stitched down with small blanket stitches sometimes in contrasting colors, to reveal underlaying colors- the quilting on these is generally 'contour' quilting, in large, bold stitches of many different colors,

The variety of textile techniques that are gathered under the idea 'quilt' is huge. There's many more.
espresso_addict: Two cups of espresso with star effect on coffee pot (coffee cups)

Re: So many quilts! So little time.

[personal profile] espresso_addict 2017-10-27 08:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks for this elucidation! The reverse applique work sounds fascinating.