Go Back  Quiltingboard Forums >
  • Introduce Yourself
  • New here with an old quilt >
  • New here with an old quilt

  • New here with an old quilt

    Thread Tools
     
    Old 05-28-2011, 06:37 AM
      #71  
    Banned
     
    Join Date: May 2010
    Location: Midwest
    Posts: 527
    Default

    Originally Posted by rphillips
    And finally these pictures are of her little blue silk dress, and an embroidered coat with attached cape. I hope you enjoy.
    These are just too wonderful for words. I absolutely LOVE the little embroidered coat.

    These seem to be very expensive items for the time, would you care to share what your family did as a living to afford such wonderful things?

    I have photos of my Grandfather and his sister in fabulous clothes and the family wasnt wealthy. As it turns out, she was a professional seamstress. So, things are not always as they seem.
    JCquilts is offline  
    Old 05-28-2011, 08:24 AM
      #72  
    Super Member
     
    mshawii's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jul 2010
    Location: Portland Oregon suburbs
    Posts: 1,053
    Default

    This one reminds me of "Seven Sisters". Or a variation of it. Jan
    mshawii is offline  
    Old 05-28-2011, 09:22 AM
      #73  
    Banned
     
    Join Date: Dec 2009
    Location: England
    Posts: 2,365
    Default

    Originally Posted by Ramona Byrd
    Welcome from the central valley of CA.

    I'd suggest that you make a permanent fabric label to go on the quilt, giving all this same information. And dates. These quilts will probably be treasured far into the future, and you would want your aunt and her mother's names to be remembered.
    Do so agree.
    Do you have more?
    mayday is offline  
    Old 05-28-2011, 09:38 AM
      #74  
    Super Member
     
    Join Date: Feb 2011
    Location: Yorkville, IL
    Posts: 7,639
    Default

    Welcome from Illinois! What fabulous things...thanks so much for sharing. As a collector of textiles and an avid quilter it was so much fun to see these and drool!
    luvstoquilt is offline  
    Old 05-28-2011, 09:44 AM
      #75  
    Member
    Thread Starter
     
    Join Date: May 2011
    Posts: 13
    Default

    [quote=JCquilts][quote=rphillips]
    Originally Posted by JCquilts
    Originally Posted by rphillips
    Originally Posted by JCquilts
    Originally Posted by rphillips
    And it was quilted in very tiny circles made with Mother's thimble as a pattern for the quilting. "
    Thank you so much and YES, Id love to see the coats too.
    How lucky you are to have such great family artifacts.
    These are closeups of the star cluster and hopefully you can see the small quilted circles.
    This is very interesting. I love the little circles and quite inovative for the time.

    I am guessing that you are familiar with the pattern that we know today as the Seven Sisters. It is so very different than yours. This one, too, seems to be an original design of which I can find no published pattern. It is a very difficult design to put together with the odd shaped pieces between the stars and then all pieced into a circle. It is incredible. Your Grandmother must have been an extrodinary artist/seamstress and a very creative original herself. The drafting of this design took some doing.

    And the clothes...I have an extensive textile collection and I am in awe. These too are very historic, with the label in the coat from N.O. Just Amazing.

    It is also pretty amazing that these things have survived down there on the Gulf Coast. My Mom was born and raised in Biloxi and most of our family artifacts were lost in various huricanes.

    I have one bedspread that I helped my Grandmother make when we were visiting during Hurican Camille. My Mom removed it to California before Katrina, or it would be gone too.

    How lucky you are to have these wonderful things.

    I am assuming that, as a textile collector, you have knowledge about the best ways to store and care for your textiles. But, if you would like any input from me, please feel free to PM me.

    Today my family lives in Gonzales and New Iberia. And I am planning a trip to Alabama for a family reunion this fall(hopefully). I would love to see your quilts in person some day.

    Take good care of yourself and your stuff...
    Thank you for your comments. The family lived in N. Louisiana, having migrated there from Georgia then Alabama to there. So the climate was not so humid/wet as in S. Louisiana My ggrandfather was first a small merchant, then got into the cotton trading business, then became a moderate sized planter. Gggrandmother was apparently very talented and capable, running things herself while her husband was away in the war. After the Civil War they moved to New Orleans, and a few years later to Mississippi. That's where his oldest daughter, my ggrandmother, met her husband and raised her family.

    I know Gonzales, having gone to LSU many years ago and passed through on the old Airline on the way to NOLA many times; and my wife and I lived in Lafayette for a number of years, so I know New Iberia also.
    rphillips is offline  
    Old 05-30-2011, 05:17 AM
      #76  
    Member
    Thread Starter
     
    Join Date: May 2011
    Posts: 13
    Default

    I thought I would add to this thread one more quilting item, an unfinished strip of applique' panels made from the same green cloth as the 'Confederate Star' quilt shown earlier. The red is different. It must be of the same age but the material is in much better shape and also much brighter. The piece is about 8 ft. long and the stitching on the back is so tiny and appears to be about 12/inch. Because of the red and green color we use it as a table runner at Christmas.

    Is this a recognized pattern pattern and does anyone here know its name?
    Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version

Name:	Attachment-204178.jpe
Views:	73
Size:	49.4 KB
ID:	204184   Click image for larger version

Name:	Attachment-204179.jpe
Views:	73
Size:	59.8 KB
ID:	204185  
    rphillips is offline  
    Old 05-30-2011, 06:06 AM
      #77  
    Banned
     
    Join Date: May 2010
    Location: Midwest
    Posts: 527
    Default

    Like most quilt blocks, this one has many names. I have seen it most commonly called Oak Leaf and Reel and was made with many variations in the leaves and later even in the reel. This one has a small variation from the current Oak Leaf and Reel, that being the two little leaves on each reel.

    The first "published" version that I have found was Ladies Art Company who called it California Oak Leaf without the extra leaves. This version was published in 1922. Ladies Art Company published their first catalog of quilt patterns in the late 1800s, we think around 1892 or 4.

    Yours, as were many others, were made earlier than even the first published patterns, one dating back to 1818. In the 1840s and 50s it was a popular design for album quilts and other applique quilts. This is one of those old standards that were popular and shared often.

    It would be so interesting to know where your grandmother learned her craft.
    JCquilts is offline  
    Old 05-30-2011, 06:38 AM
      #78  
    Member
    Thread Starter
     
    Join Date: May 2011
    Posts: 13
    Default

    Originally Posted by JCquilts
    Like most quilt blocks, this one has many names. I have seen it most commonly called Oak Leaf and Reel. However, this one has a small variation, that being the two little leaves on each real. Nice addition.

    The first "published" version that I have found was Ladies Art Company who called it California Oak Leaf, again without the extra leaves. This version was published in 1922.

    Yours, as were many others, were made earlier than even the first published patterns. This is one of those old standards that were popular and shared often. It would be so interesting to know where your grandmother learned her craft.
    Thank you for your help, you were dead on. I googled Oak Leaf and Reel and a site by Terry Clothier Thompson popped up with a picture of the design, also with two little extra leaves. She says it dates back to c. 1830.

    I don't know where gggrandmother learned. As mentioned before she grew up in Georgia, went to Alabama for a few years after marrying, and then on to N. Louisiana. I sure wish she had finished this one.

    Are applique' stitches generally so tiny? I can't count them without a magnifying glass.

    Also, I want to say that this is the nicest, most helpful board of any type I've run across.
    rphillips is offline  
    Old 05-30-2011, 06:45 AM
      #79  
    Banned
     
    Join Date: May 2010
    Location: Midwest
    Posts: 527
    Default

    Yes, good applique stitches are very very tiny. Mine are about 16 per inch, and I have seen one person who put a stitch in almost every thread of the fabric (a little overkill if you ask me, but she did win at the Houston Quilt Show)

    But when you look at good applique, like these, you will see that there are no little points in the curves, leaves touch the pieces they are attached to, not seperated by the background fabric, and the outside points are sharp. The little stitches is one way to accomplish smooth curves.
    JCquilts is offline  
    Old 05-31-2011, 04:12 AM
      #80  
    Super Member
     
    Join Date: Mar 2011
    Location: Maryland
    Posts: 2,822
    Default

    Originally Posted by JCquilts
    Like most quilt blocks, this one has many names. I have seen it most commonly called Oak Leaf and Reel and was made with many variations in the leaves and later even in the reel. This one has a small variation from the current Oak Leaf and Reel, that being the two little leaves on each reel.

    The first "published" version that I have found was Ladies Art Company who called it California Oak Leaf without the extra leaves. This version was published in 1922. Ladies Art Company published their first catalog of quilt patterns in the late 1800s, we think around 1892 or 4.

    Yours, as were many others, were made earlier than even the first published patterns, one dating back to 1818. In the 1840s and 50s it was a popular design for album quilts and other applique quilts. This is one of those old standards that were popular and shared often.

    It would be so interesting to know where your grandmother learned her craft.
    I couldn't begin to improve on this explanation! I am in awe of the needlework done in your family!
    QuiltMom2 is offline  
    Related Topics
    Thread
    Thread Starter
    Forum
    Replies
    Last Post
    happyquiltmom
    Introduce Yourself
    29
    02-22-2012 11:33 AM
    DianaSwi
    Main
    4
    02-15-2011 02:24 PM
    CarolinePaj
    Pictures
    90
    02-13-2011 12:41 PM
    LIZE
    Introduce Yourself
    15
    11-02-2008 06:09 AM

    Posting Rules
    You may not post new threads
    You may not post replies
    You may not post attachments
    You may not edit your posts

    BB code is On
    Smilies are On
    [IMG] code is On
    HTML code is On
    Trackbacks are Off
    Pingbacks are Off
    Refbacks are Off



    FREE Quilting Newsletter