Saturday’s Quilt Jigsaw Puzzle: The Darwin Quilt

Your Saturday Quilt Jigsaw Puzzle Tip: for best results, solve puzzle on this page on a desktop computer or laptop. If you are solving on a mobile device, click on the puzzle piece icon in the lower righthand corner to solve on the Jigsaw Planet website.  Welcome to this week’s quilt jigsaw puzzle from Quilt Alliance! The beautiful quilts in the puzzles have all been contestants or quilt donations in current or past Quilt Alliance contests and auctions. Be sure to sign up for our blog notifications, so that you don’t miss any of the upcoming puzzles.   The Darwin Quilt by Jean Van Bockel This week’s puzzle spotlights a quilt entitled The Darwin Quilt made by artist Jean Van Bockel of Boise, Idaho for the 2014 Quilt Alliance “Inspired By” contest and auction. The piece is made from cotton fabric, and is hand appliquéd and embroidered, and machine quilted. Jean was awarded an Honorable Mention by Quilt Alliance members. Artist’s Statement   From the DAR collection there is a beautiful appliquéd quilt made by Josephine Miller Adkins in 1874. Her family called it the Biblical Stories Quilt. It was made right after Darwin’s theory of evolution was published, This shocking new concept stirred up controversy around the world and is still debated 140 years later. I took design ideas from Josephine’s quilt but used bright colors, added a Darwin fish and put a monkey on the tree of knowledge. About Quilt Alliance We rely on the generous support of donors and members like you to sustain our projects. If you support our mission of documenting, preserving, and sharing the stories of quilts and quiltmakers, join us by becoming a member or renewing your membership, making a donation, or learning how your business or corporation can become a supporter of the Quilt…

Quilt Historian Meets Fashion Designer

In the lecture that we give as part of our Quilt Story Road Show program, we share our Top Five Reasons You Should Label Your Quilt. One of those reasons is “For your family: because a quilt can’t speak for itself, and it might outlive you.” More and more often though, we hear a common refrain, “What if my family doesn’t want my quilts? Then what? Who will want them and appreciate them?” In an effort to dig into this question, we asked quilt historian Merikay Waldvogel of Knoxville, Tennessee to write our first post of a blog series we’re calling The Next Quilt Keepers. Merikay recently interviewed fashion designer Emily Bode who uses salvaged quilts in her menswear pieces. Join or renew your membership with the Quilt Alliance to watch StoryBee episode 3, featuring Emily Bode interviewed by Merikay Waldvogel (watch at the end of this post). The Next Quilt Keepers: Quilt Historian Meets Fashion Designer by Merikay Waldvogel First, I saw photos of Kardashian women lounging on bright red-and-white pieced quilts inside a barn. Calvin Klein was advertising his spring line in Manhattan this spring. I wasn’t sure what the quilts, the barn or the Kardashians had to do with selling clothes, but they sure got my attention. More than one designer used quilts this spring, and I wasn’t the only quilt historian who cringed. Haven’t we been down this road before. Why do quilts have to be destroyed for the sake of design, marketing or shock value? And then I read about 28-year-old fashion designer Emily Bode in GQ Style Magazine: “Bode is winning the New York Fashion Race with Quilts (Yes Quilts). She is turning rare and forgotten textiles into workwear you’ll want to start collecting.” She’s designing clothes for men (Yes Men) with quilts! I wasn’t sure why I wasn’t as upset this time. I shared my feelings with Amy Milne (Quilt Alliance executive director). She, too, had seen the article and Bode’s line of menswear. Visit Bode’s website to see for yourself. My husband wouldn’t wear such outfits, but Amy’s teenage son might. We all thought they were original and refreshing. I jumped at the chance to interview Emily Bode for the Alliance’s StoryBee project. How cool! We would do it using the video camera on our iPhones! What questions would I ask her? I invited my quilt friends to suggest some questions. One friend groused, “She doesn’t want to hear my opinion. I wouldn’t be caught dead in one of her jackets.” Another friend gave me my best question, “How do you see yourself as being different from others who are using the quilt theme in their fashions?” For all quilt lovers, the big question was “Why cut up quilts?” The more I considered that question, the more I stumbled upon the irony of quilts themselves being made from cut-up textiles, clothing, bed linens, salesmen samples, feed sacks and aprons. I think our unease has to do with the fact that quilts, for the most part, are anonymous. The fact that the quilt remains in relatively good shape is a testament to the work of the quiltmaker. And who are we to cut it up, to end its use? I knew I would have to ask her that question. She had heard the criticism before. She responded that some quilts in jackets that people are most upset about were made by quilters on her staff. When she must “repurpose” a vintage quilt, she does her best to record its history, pattern name, and age on the garment tag. She even hopes to embed the history in some sort of barcode for the buyer to keep. She won my heart with this answer. This is exactly what the Alliance has advocated for since its inception. Save the stories in any way possible. I asked her why quilts this year seem to be popular and how long she plans to use vintage fabrics and quilts. She told me what she is doing differently is that she is building her Bode menswear brand around repurposing vintage fabrics and needlework. Hers is not an advertising ploy. The various colors, patterning, surface embroidery and even repairs will determine the look of the line from season to season. Then my mind started spinning? If she is going to flourish and have multiple garments sold in stores, where will she find enough quilts, crocheted items, needlework, and quilt tops. She told me that one cut-up quilt or top doesn’t make more than three jackets. She shops online and at antique markets for textiles, but one particular dealer in New England looks for things Emily might like. She told me she was on her way to India to check out warehoused bolts of fabrics—”deadstock” she called it. “Sometimes we are lucky and find a few pieces of 1920s or 30s fabrics. Usually, it’s 1980s fabrics which is just fine,” she said. Hmmm, I thought – 1980s fabrics? This might be the answer to a problem we fabric hoarders have! We could all ship her boxes of fabrics, unfinished projects, quilt blocks and tops, or even crocheted items. She smiled when I made the suggestion but didn’t reject the idea outright. She does seem to have plenty of “materiel” already. Before I got carried away with my “brilliant” idea, I wondered if she really knew the difference between a quilt to save and a quilt to repurpose. She convinced me when she talked about hand-made quilts with lots of quilting. Listen to her answers. In conclusion, this seventy-year-old quilt historian is glad to have met twenty-eight-year-old fashion designer, Emily Bode. I came away from the interview with a smile on my face. This young woman has found her voice and found her brand. Her journey has not been long but she seems to know where she’s going. I learned what she values, how she creates and what it takes to produce a fashion line. I may not ever wear a jacket made of an 1880s Log Cabin quilt no matter how distressed it, but in the hands of Emily Bode, our quilts and their stories are resonating once again in this modern world. And like the repair to broken Japanese pottery known as “kintsugi,” in this case, the re-purposing may result in something not only longer- lasting, but also more artistic than the original.

  Merikay Waldvogel, one of the key players of the late 20th century quilt history revival, has served on the board of directors of both the American quilt Study Group and the Quilt Alliance. She has been involved in a number of QA projects including: The Quilt Index, Boxes Under the Bed, Quilt Treasures, and QSOS. Her quilt journey began with the purchase of one quilt in Chicago that touched her heart even though she knew nothing about its maker or the circumstances of its making. A few years later in Tennessee, she co-directed the Tennessee Quilt Survey in the 1980s, and began writing and lecturing about women and their quilts. She has written several books including: Quilts of Tennessee, Soft Covers for Hard Times, Patchwork Souvenirs of the 1933 World’s Fair, Southern Quilts of the Civil War, and Childhood…

Special National Quilting Day Jigsaw Puzzle: Twenty Blocks for Twenty Years

A Special Quilt Jigsaw Puzzle to Celebrate National Quilting Day Welcome to this week’s quilt jigsaw puzzle from Quilt Alliance! The beautiful quilts in our puzzles were all entered in and donated to current or past Quilt Alliance contests and auctions. Be sure to sign up for our blog notifications, so that you don’t miss any of the upcoming puzzles.  Twenty Blocks for Twenty Years by Alison Ruggiero This week’s puzzle features a quilt entitled Twenty Blocks for Twenty Years made by artist Alison Ruggiero of Brooklyn, New York for the 2013 Quilt Alliance “TWENTY” contest and auction, celebrating our 20th anniversary. Materials used include: Kona cotton solids, Quilters Dream cotton batting, top sewn using Mettler silk finish 100% cotton. Quilting done using Harriet Hargrave’s Invisible Nylon Thread and clover silk thread. Paper piecing, applique, free motion and walking foot quilting ARTIST’S STATEMENT “Twenty Blocks for Twenty Years” by Alison Ruggiero   To celebrate the anniversary, I designed a quilt using 20 blocks, each block representing one year the Quilt Alliance has been in operation. All the blocks are different – some were easy, some were challenging as I am sure the twenty years have been. 5 of the 20 blocks consist of words which express my quilting experience, thus continuing the cycle and mission of storytelling since the start of QA in 1993. ABOUT QUILT ALLIANCE We rely on the generous support of donors and members like you to sustain our projects. If you support our mission of documenting, preserving, and sharing the stories of quilts and quiltmakers, join us by becoming a member or renewing your membership, making a donation, or learning how your business or corporation can become a supporter of the Quilt…

StoryBee Announcement

The nonprofit Quilt Alliance launched StoryBee, a new interview show created for its members. The twenty-minute web-based program will profile notable people who make, collect, sell, study, exhibit and/or preserve quilts. In keeping with the Quilt Alliance mission to document, preserve and share the history of quilts, StoryBee will record conversations with interesting people from all corners of the quilt world and bring these stories to our members.   The Quilt Alliance is proud to feature Victoria Findlay Wolfe in the debut episode of StoryBee. Victoria is a NYC based International Award Winning Quilter and teacher. She was raised on a farm in central Minnesota, and learned to sew and quilt when she was just four years old. Victoria graduated from the College of Visual Arts in St. Paul, Minnesota with a bachelor’s degree in Fine Art in 1993, and a year later moved to New York City. Victoria has an upcoming exhibit at the Iowa Quilt Museum opening April 17th (through July 29): Playing with Purpose: Victoria Findlay Wolfe Retrospective. Victoria Findlay Wolfe   Frances O’Roark Dowell, the host of StoryBee, is an author and quiltmaker and is best known for her “beloved books for tweens and teenagers” (New York Times Sunday Book Review). Since 2010 she has also hosted a popular podcast about her life as a quilter, The Off-Kilter Quilt, and in 2016 established a small publishing company to bring out a line of stories and novels especially for quiltmakers and quilt lovers. The quilting novel Birds in the Air was followed by the short story collection Margaret Goes Modern in 2017. Stars Upon Stars – a sequel to Birds in the Air – will be published in 2018. She lives in Durham, North Carolina, with her husband, two sons, and a dog named Travis. Frances O’Roark Dowell   StoryBee, Episode 1 will be available to the public through the end of February, after which a member’s login will be required to access StoryBee videos. Upcoming guests include: Alex Anderson, Carolyn Crump, Marin Hanson, Roderick Kiracofe, Carolyn Mazloomi, Luana Rubin, Denyse Schmidt, Julie Silber, Ricky Tims, and Nichole Wilde. Quilt Alliance members pick the membership fee that suits their budget, starting as low as $25, with the option to receive thank you gifts at each level. New and current Quilt Alliance members are encouraged to begin or renew their memberships by February 28, after which fees will go up 20% (the first increase since 2004, when the QA membership program began). One lucky QA member will win a special Valentine’s Bundle, sponsored by Victoria Findlay Wolfe Quilts, to be drawn on March 1. All current members as of February 28 will be eligible to win. Valentines Bundle Giveaway for QA Members Member support enables the small nonprofit, with one full time and two part-time staff members, to maintain and grow several important grassroots oral history projects. Projects include Quilters’ S.O.S.- Save Our Stories (QSOS), archived in the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, Go Tell It at the Quilt Show! a short-format video project presented on YouTube, and the Quilt Story Road Show education and outreach program. For more information visit our membership page. The Quilt Alliance is proud to be sponsored by these generous companies. View our full sponsor list…

The Gift that Keeps On Giving

In September, the Quilt Alliance hosted its last Quilters Take Manhattan fundraising event. We are sad to end this chapter in our history, but excited about our next adventure–the launch of Quilt Story Road Show in 2018. Watch a video about the road show here! Through Quilters Take Manhattan we made a lot of new friends and worked with some of the most loyal and generous sponsors in the business. Every year at QTM we gave away door prizes and held both a silent auction and a raffle. Our sponsors went all out to provide prizes and items to bid on–the quilt bling was bountiful and beautiful! At our 2017 event in the Big Apple, one of our longtime sponsors Handi Quilter, Inc. donated one of their HQ Stitch machines for our door prize drawing. Lisa Mason of Darien, Connecticut came to QTM this year and put all of her raffle tickets into one box–the one for the HQ Stitch 210 sewing machine donated by Handi Quilter. She had a plan. Lisa’s daughter Caroline works at Elizabeth Seton Pediatric Center in Yonkers, NY, providing art therapy for mothers whose children live in the care facility full time. The program only had one sewing machine, and Lisa decided that if she won the machine in the raffle, she would gift it to this worthy program. Guess who won the raffle? 🙂 “I was so delighted when I actually won!!” said Lisa. “Karma is a wonderful thing!! I’m so thrilled that I could give them that machine.  It is such a great portable!! Of course I had to try it out before I gave it to them.  I used it to teach a group of 9 and 10 year olds how to sew simple patchwork at our local library.  Passing down the obsession!” We were so excited to hear Lisa’s story, further proof that quilters (and quilt industry leaders) are the most generous people you’ll meet. We can’t wait to start traveling to guilds and groups across America to hear more stories of generous deeds and needs met. Find out how you can book a spot on the Quilt Story Road Show on our website.   We’d love to hear about the ways you and/or your guild or group gives back to your community (comment below). On behalf of our sponsors and our members, I wish you a very happy holiday season. May we always know the joy of giving! Holiday hugs to you,…