Exquisite Tennis.

On this day in 1943, Arthur Robert Ashe, Jr. was born in Richmond, Virginia. Ashe’s father wouldn’t let him play football because of his slight build, but nearby his childhood home was Brookfield Playground, Richmond’s largest blacks-only playground, which had a tennis court. Ashe’s love for the game began here and Ashe went on to become the first African American man ever to win the singles title at Wimbledon, the U.S. Open and Australian Open. He retired in 1981 and died in 1993 from AIDS-related pneumonia. He worked the last year of his life to educate others about HIV and AIDS. This white and red wholecloth quilt (detail view) was made by the owner’s mother’s aunt (unnamed in this record) and was brought to New Jersey in 1951. The quilt is embroidered and the quilting design is done in a unique tennis racquet pattern. The owner documented the quilt in 1989 during the Heritage Quilt Project of New Jersey, Inc. View this quilt on The Quilt Index to read more about it’s history, design and construction. Be sure to use the zoom tool for a detailed view. Source: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/wimbledon-tournament-begins Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…

Liberty Bell Cheater Cloth

On this day in 1776, the Liberty Bell, a 2,000-pound copper and tin bell, rang out from the tower of the Pennsylvania State House in Philadelphia calling citizens to come and hear the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence, signed four days earlier. The crack in the Liberty Bell is though to have first happened when tolling for the funeral of U.S. Chief Justice John Marshall in 1835, and then expanded to it’s current size in 1846. An unnamed quilter from New Jersey hand pieced and hand quilted this Centennial Quilt in 1876. “This patriotic quilt is sewn from 18 printed Centennial banners. Each of the twelve banners on the outside edge has thirteen red and white stripes and thirty-nine white stars on a blue field. The fabric includes Cheater fabric (pre-printed appliqué or pieced design) depicting flags and portraits of George Washington….Above [Washington’s] head is the Liberty Bell with the crack showing.” The quilt was passed down by the granddaughter of the maker, who was a young girl at the time the quilt was made, and documented as part of The Heritage Quilt Project of New Jersey, Inc. View this quilt on The Quilt Index to read more about it’s history, design and construction. Be sure to use the zoom tool for a detailed view. Source: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/liberty-bell-tolls-to-announce-declaration-of-independence Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…

Q.S.O.S. Spotlight

For many Americans, the 4th of July means cookouts, fireworks and a chance to celebrate their country. Since we’re just a few days past Independence Day, this week’s Q.S.O.S. Spotlight features several quiltmakers who have made quilts that salute the United States! Carlie Nichols of North Carolina shares a quilt she made for American service members: “The quilt I brought with me today is a patriotic quilt, I’m always looking for interesting, new patriotic patterns and this one I designed after seeing a picture on the internet of a quilt that was going to be on the cover of String Quilt Revival. I love string quilts and have made many of them but this one was a little different, so I took the picture, I sketched it myself and I drew it to be a little bit larger and made it into more of a patriotic quilt and it’s very patriotic, actually. The stars on the quilt are navy blue, and the border, as you can see, is red, white and blue and it’s plainly patriotic. It’s going to be a hard one to let go of but I think I’ll be able to… I know it will go to one of our service members or veterans, and from my experience in the last three or four years I realize how much they appreciate them. So knowing that they will go to someone who has given so much for our country means a whole lot to me.” Margarete Heinisch created a quilt to commemorate her new American citizenship. “The idea to do this piece was to celebrate the year 2000 and my upcoming U.S. citizenship and I wanted to use mainly the colors of red and blue… My wish was to become a citizen in the year 2000. I did send my application went in 1998 and it could take three months to three years to become a citizen, as it will be picked by computers so I thought I wish it would be the year 2000 that I get it. And my wish did come true but my friends teased me and said, ‘Do you refuse it when it comes today or next week,’ and I said, ‘Of course, not because I would have it nicely wrapped up in the year 2000.’ And my wish did come true to become an American citizen. I will actually be the citizen of fifty states and so I thought I’d do the border around the quilt with the pictures of all fifty State Capitols. They are in order by year of their admittance into the union. The two in the middle in the top row are The White House and the State Capitol in Washington D.C. and then the fifty states go clockwise. There are all together fifty-two circles, because only the fifty did not work on the square. I laid out the quilt, starting from the center, with the 2000 easy to see.” Carole Lyles Shaw shares a quilt she made to honor America’s veterans–including her own family–for a 2008 show of quilts celebrating president Barack Obama’s inauguration. “This quilt is part of a series of quilts and other mixed media art work that I am creating to honor the memories of ordinary men and women who served in the American Armed Forces, particularly in the early part of the 20th Century and most of the work features images and documents and so forth from 1960 or earlier… What I’ve done is I’ve transferred photographs onto fabric and some of these photographs are from my family collection that I have of my father, my uncles and some of their friends. I have a letter that was sent by the White House to my father thanking him for his service in the Armed Forces and that letter dates to probably the late forties or early fifties… Some of the words on my quilt are ‘land of liberty’ and ‘stars and stripes’ and ‘on the path to change’. Those words, those themes are what I wanted to convey. It is a narrative quilt, a story quilt almost but you’ve got to kind of read it slowly to get the full story.” You can read more stories about quilts and quiltmakers at the Quilters’ S.O.S.- Save Our Stories page on the Alliance’s site. Posted by Emma Parker Project Manager,  Quilters’ S.O.S.- Save Our Stories…

Quilters Take Manhattan Tickets are now on sale!

Isn’t it time you treated yourself to a bite out of the Big Apple? The Quilt Alliance has a  fantastic weekend of fun planned for quilt lovers like you in New York City, September 27-29. Join us! The Alliance’s annual fundraiser, Quilters Take Manhattan, has expanded considerably this year based on great feedback from our 2012 guests. Along with our featured speaker, Hollis Chatelain (at left), and Go Tell It at the Quilt Show! interviews with Paula Nadelstern and members of her artist’s group Semper Tedium, this year we’ve added two days of add-on events (Friday and Sunday), available to all those who register for the FIT event on Saturday, Sept. 28. Add-on’s include small-group workshops at The City Quilter shop, outings to the Garment District and “Wicked” on Broadway, and rub-elbow receptions with quilt world stars, established and emerging. Visit the QTM event webpage for complete information about all the events. Also new this year–vendors! Many of our Gold sponsors will have product tables at the FIT event with an array of goodies for sale including fabric, thread, documentation supplies, and quilt kits. Click on the link below to register for Quilters Take Manhattan in New York. Can’t make it to NYC in September? Click on the link below to purchase a Home Ticket! Only $25 for Alliance…

Historical Bikini.

On this day in 1946, French designer Louis Reard unveiled a daring two-piece swimsuit at a popular swimming pool in Paris. Reard called it the “bikini,” inspired by the U.S. atomic test that took place off the Bikini Atoll in the Pacific Ocean earlier that week. This quilt, titled “Historical Bikini” was made by Rebecca Navarro of Sugar Land, Texas for the “Alliances” quilt contest held by the Quilt Alliance in 2011.  From Navarro’s artist statement: “Dressing the ancient female figure in a bikini takes her out of her element. By standing the figure in front of the graffiti covered wall, art from the past is joined to the present.” View this quilt on The Quilt Index to read more about it’s history, design and construction. Be sure to use the zoom tool for a detailed view. Source: http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/bikini-introduced Posted by Amy E. Milne Executive Director, Quilt Alliance…