The Romance of the Patchwork Quilt in America in Three Parts - History and Quilt Patches - Quilts, Antique and Modern - Quilting and Quilting Designs
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The Romance of the Patchwork Quilt in America in Three Parts - History and Quilt Patches - Quilts, Antique and Modern - Quilting and Quilting Designs - Read Books Ltd.
The Romance of the
Patchwork Quilt
In America
IN THREE PARTS
PART I
History and Quilt Patches
PART II
Quilts—Antique and Modern
BY CARRIE A. HALL
PART III
Quilting and Quilting Designs
BY ROSE G. KRETSINGER
PHOTOGRAPHS BY MARY ELLEN EVERHARD
TO
QUILT LOVERS—EVERYWHERE
World Without End
FOREWORD
THIS book is a human record of a homecraft art that has played no small part in the growth and development of American life across the ages from the earliest Colonial times to the present day. First as a necessary part of pioneer home-making, then as a product of an awakened desire for beauty in the home, and now this twentieth century revival is an appreciation of that art, which of all the time-honored household arts has withstood the machine age, and has by no means reached its climax.
When the World War was over and there was no longer a necessity for knitting socks and sweaters, I found my fingers itching for some pick-up
work, so I turned to quilt-making, which had always interested me from the time when on my seventh birthday my pioneer mother cut the patches for a star quilt that under her watchful guidance proved a masterpiece that was a nine-day wonder in the neighborhood.
Quilt-making proved to be very interesting pick-up
work. In fact, it not only kept my fingers busy, but it stimulated my imagination and I created several new designs. After completing my baker’s dozen
I realized that I couldn’t continue making quilts indefinitely, and yet I was so fascinated by all the numerous and beautiful patterns that I conceived the idea of making a collection of patches, one like every known pattern, little realizing the magnitude of the undertaking. The collection now contains over one thousand patches and is to be placed in the Thayer Museum of Art of the University of Kansas.
Having displayed the collection on several occasions, I have been persuaded to put it into book form, so that my friends, and all others who love quilts and are actively engaged in quilting, may enjoy it. Some seven hundred of these patches are reproduced in this book, together with a short history of the origin and development of patchwork in America.
Patterns were collected from every available source and grateful acknowledgment is herewith made to:
All my friends, who so generously assisted in a still hunt for quilt patterns, old and new. Also to:
Old Patchwork Quilts and the Women Who Made Them, by Ruth Finley; Quilts, Their Story and How to Make Them, by Marie D. Webster; Old Fashioned Quilts, by Carlie Sexton; The Thayer Museum of Art; The Kansas City Star; The Seattle Post-Intelligencer and Prudence Penny; Grandmother Clark’s Old Fashioned Quilt Designs; The MoKim Studios; The Woman’s Home Companion; The Ladies’ Home Journal; The Modern Priscilla; The Household Magazine; The Royal Neighbor; The Ladies’ Art Co.; Mountain Mist Quilting Cotton; and many from sources unknown.
In making this collection I found that nearly all of the better-known designs were included in every commercialized group offered for sale.
One of the most pleasing phases of this research work has been the discovery of many beautiful quilts, owned by friends which are reproduced in Part II.
CARRIE A. HALL
"Here practise and invention may be free
And as a squirrel skips from tree to tree,
So maids may (from their mistresse or their mother)
Learń to leave one worke, and learne another.
For here they may make choice of which is which,
And skip from worke to worke, from stitch to stitch,
Until, in time, delightful practise shall
(With profit) make them perfect in them all.
Thus hoping that these workes may have this guide
To serve for ornament, and not for pride:
To cherish verture, banish idlenesse,
For these ends, may this booke have good successe."
The Needle’s Excellency—John Taylor, 1580-1653
Table of Contents
PART I
ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF QUILT-MAKING WITH PHOTOGRAPHIC REPRODUCTIONS OF PATCHES
1. THE ROMANCE OF PATCHWORK
2. QUILT NAMES
3. THE QUILTING BEE
4. THE QUILT’S PLACE IN ART
5. THE QUILT IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
6. HISTORICAL QUILTS FROM RECENT EXHIBITIONS
7. GLEANINGS FROM OLD SCRAPBOOKS
8. HOW TO MAKE A QUILT
9. REPRODUCTIONS OF QUILT PATCHES
PART II
QUILTS OF COLONIAL ANCESTRY AND OF MODERN DESIGN
QUILTS—ANTIQUE AND MODERN
PART III
THE ART OF QUILTING AND QUILTING DESIGNS
THE ART OF QUILTING
QUILTING DESIGNS
Part 1
Origin and History of Quilt-making With Photographic Reproductions of Patches
1
THE ROMANCE OF PATCHWORK
QUILT-MAKING is one of the most fascinating forms of needlecraft. It is occupying the attention of womankind everywhere, and every enthusiastic quilter who has one or more under construction is eagerly hunting for new patterns. These must be authentic antique designs or, if modern, have definite artistic merit.
Broadly speaking, anything made of two pieces of material with padding between and held together with stitches is a quilt. Common usage has restricted the term to bed-covering. A quilter is one who makes patchwork or applique work, or who quilts the top and lining together.
As known today, the quilt is the result of combining two kinds of needlework, both of very ancient origin but widely different in character. Patchwork is the art of piecing together fabrics of various kinds and colors; quilting is the method of fastening together layers of cloth to secure firmly the filling,
the amount of which is entirely governed by the need of protection against rigorous climates.
The quilt, as we know it in America, was in the beginning a strictly utilitarian article, born of the necessity of providing warm covers for beds and hangings for doors and windows that were not sufficiently fitted to keep out the cold of a New England winter, and were so intimately connected with the everyday life of the colonists that no record of them exists. What was yesterday a necessity is today a luxury.
We learn from Colonial history that there were three primary groups of colonists: the New Englanders with their abstract and positive theologies; the Dutch with their home-making instincts; and the luxury-loving Virginians.
The unrestraint of the civilization that the colonists had left behind them had made its mark upon their character. Within the four walls of the crude log cabins there was little thought of adornment or art, and yet the artistic longing, latent or inherent in every woman where her home is concerned, unconsciously expressed itself in her patchwork. The keener her sense of the artistic the more intricate her quilt patterns and the finer her stitches in the quilting of her masterpiece. Who shall say that woman’s mind is inferior to man’s, when, with no knowledge of mathematics, these women worked out geometric designs so intricate, and co-related each patch to all others in the block?
Needlework, like other phases of human endeavor, runs true to type, as is reflected in the quilt names and designs of each different locality. These designs were used again and again by succeeding generations, without any variations until after the Revolution, when families from each of these groups joined in the settlement of Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, and other central states known to them as the West.
Women who in pioneering days unflinchingly turned their faces westward toward hardship and danger that the nation might expand were delighted with the opportunity thus afforded to exchange quilt patterns.
Every ambitious quilter with originality and artistic instincts delights in changing and improving designs; so these young pioneers, using the old patterns as a foundation, worked out new designs and christened them to suit their new environment. Hence, it is not unusual to find patterns of the same design having different names.
Under the general title of Patchwork
we may consider three different kinds of quilts. First: the pieced quilt, showing the pieced patch set together in various ways and subsequently quilted in designs specially adapted to its requirements. Nearly all quilts made in America prior to 1750 were pieced quilts, and we love to think of some Dutch or New England housewife spreading the first pieced quilt over her frontier bed. Second: the appliqued, patched, or laid-on
quilt, usually of floral design and considered more elegant than the humble pieced
variety. Applique for quilt-making came into favor about the middle of the eighteenth century and reached its climax about 1850. With the revival of patchwork in the twentieth century it has reached a perfection of artistic color-combination and needlecraft far superior to anything made in earlier times. Third: the quilted counterpane—usually white, where decoration is obtained by means of padded or corded quilting in more or less elaborate design. Examples of these may be seen in PARTS II and III of this book.
The pieced quilt (made of pieces of fabric cut after patterns and sewed together to form a block or repeat) was familiar to most households where economy was a necessity, as it was created of scraps of material not otherwise of use. The pieced quilt in pioneer days provided means of turning to good account the precious scraps of printed cottons, at that period so rare and costly. The use of so many tiny pieces in one quilt and the pride with which the number—often in the thousands—was announced, gave evidence of their patience and frugality. One notable example had thirty thousand pieces, each of which measured just one fourth by three fourths of an inch in size. In these days of hurry and stress it is difficult to envision the woman with leisure and patience for such a task.
The appliqued quilt is apt to be a more artistic expression of the quilters craft, in that it is created out of whole cloth,
so to speak, and offers correspondingly greater freedom for the expression of the designer’s artistic capabilities. In the old days, however, it was often combined with piecework, so that the gap in the family’s comfort was bridged with both comeliness and efficacy.
In pattern and workmanship, the pieced quilt seems indigenous to American soil. Mrs. Wiggs, of Cabbage Patch fame, said piecing quilts was keepin’ the peace and doin’ away with the scraps.
The pieced quilt, though considered in the old days as inferior to the elaborately quilted or appliqued quilt, is today almost equally valued because of the excellence of some of the designs, and because of its association with the four-poster beds of olden times. Among fabrics that went into it were bits of dresses of the women members of the family and their friends. Sometimes such pieces were intentionally used to make a keepsake
quilt, and for years pieces of grandmother’s wedding dress would be pointed out to the grandchildren.
History tells us very little about the patchwork quilt prior to 1750, but in the one hundred years between 1750 and 1850 many quilts were pieced and patched and many of them are now the cherished possessions of great-granddaughters of the original makers. Time adds significance to every quilt, whether you make it yourself or receive it as a gift.
The art of quilt-making is still widely practiced in the southern mountains where life is still as simple and unhurried as it was a century ago. The mountain women still make their original patterns and have no conception of life as lived in a twentieth century city. The quilt as developed by mistresses of the great plantation homes of the south was quite a different product. Made of the finest fabrics and with a premeditated color scheme, it was the quintessence of refinement and taste.
Many of the eighteenth century quilts were square, as the beds of that period were wider than those of the present day. Many were made of four blocks measuring thirty-six inches square, to which was added an eighteen-inch border, making the finished quilt one hundred and eight inches square—almost large enough for the Great Bed of Ware.
Elaborate designs such as Ben Hur’s Chariot Wheel,
the Princess Feather,
the California Plume,
or the Rose of Sharon
were used for quilts of this type, and the border was designed to carry out the same motif or it might be a Saw Tooth
pattern with no thought of the incongruity of the effect. Border effects were simple or