Q.S.O.S. Spotlight

Today’s Q.S.O.S. spotlight is on a fabric I wear every day but rarely sew with: denim. I’m sure most quilters have great genes, but there are a few quilts in the Q.S.O.S. archive that have great jeans, too! First, a video from our Go Tell It at the Quilt Show series from Hollis Chatelain at the 2013 International Quilt Festival. Hollis shares the story of a quilt she made from denim and raw-edge appliqué: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uc6JyKVkP_0 Natalia Burdanajdze from the Republic of Georgia shared a denim quilt she made from her daughter’s jackets and purses.  “It was the Alabama State Gee’s Bend exhibition and I loved one work very much. [Karen Musgrave brought an exhibit of twelve quilts from Gee’s Bend to Georgia in 2005.] It was a quilt made of jeans. It was for me a good idea to do something from jeans. So I did one of jeans for myself. “Jean’s Generation” is in our theater, it is very good, spectacular performance… Yes, inspiration from Gee’s Bend exhibition because I loved one thing from this exhibition very much; the using of the old clothes. This one is made from my daughter’s jeans… It’s by hand. All of the panel is by hand.Karen Musgrave (interviewer): And you hand quilted it. Was it difficult? Natalia: It was very hard because it was strong material. The pieces are from bags, my bags also. And I sewed little pieces that I had. Karen: You cut away the denim pieces so you could see color underneath. Natalia: Yes. I did that special to be more interesting because it was a mix of jeans and fabric… Pockets… and zippers….  It is Wrangler’s. It’s Levi’s.” Teresa Barkley shares a “patchwork” quilt she finished when she was 15: “Okay, the quilt I have with me today is called “Denim Quilt” and it’s the first quilt that I ever completed that I felt really satisfied with–it was a two year project. I started it in 1970 and finished it in ’72. It got much bigger than I thought it would be when I started, which has been an ongoing problem for me. Things frequently get bigger than originally planned. It is a collection of mostly worn denim squares cut from jeans. They are decorated with embroidery and appliqué that’s hand done as well as with commercial company patches, Army patches, Girl Scout patches, a really wide range of designs. There are 396 squares of denim, each four inches and the designs on them are all different. The idea for the quilt came from a quilt that my great-aunt made. She saw directions for making such a quilt in a Woman’s Day Magazine in the early seventies, I believe. And on a visit to Minnesota, I saw the quilt that she had made, where the designs on each square were much simpler, and I thought that this would be a really fun project. I had always been very interested in quilts and I think I had started some piecework that I had never finished of traditional designs, but the image of this quilt really fascinated me. Every square was different and that collage kind of aesthetic had always interested me. It was an easy project to work on a little bit at a time. I was a high school student at the time. All of the edges of the squares are turned back and crocheted with red crochet cotton and into that crochet is black crochet cotton, and then those edges are sewn together. Over a two year period of time I collected patches from places that I visited. I embroidered things. I appliquéd the whole alphabet. I embroidered the signs of the zodiac. I had long been interested in a collection of Army patches that were my father’s when he was a small boy. And when I began the project I really wanted some of those patches and he was not interested in parting with them. And over the course of the project he came to see how really important this was to me and what a significant thing it was becoming and in the end he was very willing for me to choose as many patches as I wanted of his collection to put into the quilt on the condition that I never sell it. He said, ‘If you ever want to sell that quilt, you have to give me back the patches.’ I reached a point where I realized that it was plenty big, I had plenty of squares and I set out to arrange them on the floor with the alphabet in order and the Army patches evenly spaced, the alphabet evenly spaced. I’m not sure what my goal was in making it actually. I was fourteen when I started it and fifteen when I finished it. I felt very strongly about finishing it before I was sixteen. I had read in quilt history books that by a certain age you should have 12 quilts done or you weren’t going to be ready when you were married, something like this–I knew it wasn’t practical for my life but I liked the idea of it. I liked what few historical stories I had read about quilts. At the time there weren’t very many books to be had about quilts but I had read every one of them that I could find. And I just knew this was something I was going to continue to work at. I had quilts that I was familiar with– there were two or three. My mother had two quilts that her grandmother had made and I loved looking at those. My grandmother on the other side of the family had one quilt that she had made. And the mix of all kinds of things from all over the place put together in something new, fascinated me. I’ve never been very interested in quilts that were two contrasting fabrics put together or a solid color. It’s not the object of the quilt that interests me so much as the process of the assembling things from all over the place into something new that means something different. The juxtaposition of all these things from a different place brought together in a particular theme is what really interests me about quilts that they have some kind of story with them.” You can read more quilt stories on the Quilters’ S.O.S.- Save Our Stories page on the Quilt Alliance site. Posted by Emma Parker Project Manager,  Quilters’ S.O.S.- Save Our Stories…

Vermillion-Born.

On this day in 1925, Dick Van Dyke, the beloved American actor who starred in the 1960’s sitcom “The Dick Van Dyke Show” was born in West Plains, Missouri. Van Dyke spent his childhood in Vermillion County, Illinois and later served in the military during World War II before launching his acting career with games shows and other acting jobs before landing the starring role in “Bye Bye Birdie” on Broadway, earning him a Tony Award. Van Dyke is still acting today after more than 50 years in show business. This “Around the World” quilt was also born in Vermillion County around this time. It was machine pieced and embroidered by Mildred Harper in Hoopeston, Illinois in 1930. The owner of the quilt, Penny Dick, of Bay City, Michigan documented the quilt during the Michigan Quilt Project in 1986. View this quilt on The Quilt Index to find out! Read more about its history, design and construction. Be sure to use the zoom tool for a detailed view or click the “See full record” link to see a larger image and all the data entered about that quilt. Source: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0001813/bio?ref_=nm_ql_1 Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…

Pennsylvania, the Constitution and Nonsuch.

On this day in 1787, Pennsylvania became the second state of the Union to ratify the U.S. Constitution. At the time one-third of Pennsylvania’s population was German-speaking, so the Constitution was printed in that language to engage these citizens in the debate. This striking tan, cream and red quilt is titled “Nonsuch,” and was made by Bessie Moyer, a German Protestant schoolteacher, between 1876-1900. The owner, Moyer’s great niece, documented the quilt during the Western Pennsylvania Quilt Documentation Project in 2010.  Don’t miss using the zoom tool on this quilt View this quilt on The Quilt Index to find out! Read more about its history, design and construction. Be sure to use the zoom tool for a detailed view or click the “See full record” link to see a larger image and all the data entered about that quilt. Source: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/pennsylvania-ratifies-the-constitution Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…

Red Cross.

On this day in 1917, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the International Committee of the Red Cross. Three years had gone by after the outbreak of World War I with no winner awarded. The Nobel Committee felt there were no worthy candidates nominated. Of special note to the committee that year was the Red Cross’s establishment of the International Prisoner-of-War Agency, which sent more than 800,000 communiqués to soldiers’ families by June 1917. The Ladies Reading Circle of Morristown, Tennessee made this Red Cross Quilt for fundraising in 1919. It was machine and hand pieced and then hand quilted by the group. It was donated to the Rose Center for the Arts in Morristown in 1976 and the museum’s director documented the quilt during the Quilts of Tennessee project. View this quilt on The Quilt Index to find out! Read more about its history, design and construction. Be sure to use the zoom tool for a detailed view or click the “See full record” link to see a larger image and all the data entered about that quilt. Source: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/red-cross-is-awarded-nobel-peace-prize Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…

I Am Woman.

On this day in 1972, Australian singer and songwriter Helen Reddy topped the U.S. pop charts with “I Am Woman.” The song represented something entirely new in an era of songs—one about the identity of women that made virtually no reference to men. Reddy wrote the song to reflect “the positive sense of self that I felt Id’ gained from the women’s movement.” Emma Mary Martha Andres of Prescott, Arizona, hand pieced and hand quilted this quilt inspired by a cross-stitch pattern, titled “Woman Spinning,” for the Sears Quilt Contest at the 1933 Chicago World’s Fair. The quilt was documented by the Merikay Waldvogel Archival Collection and is part of the Joyce Gross Quilt History collection owned by the Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas-Austin. View this quilt on The Quilt Index to find out! Read more about its history, design and construction. Be sure to use the zoom tool for a detailed view or click the “See full record” link to see a larger image and all the data entered about that quilt. Source: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/quoti-am-womanquot-by-helen-reddy-tops-the-us-pop-charts Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…