QUILTS & FABRIC: PAST & PRESENT


Wednesday, January 7, 2026

Block-Style Quilts 250 Years Ago


Charlotte Merritt Roe (1774-1836) was born in Rye, New York in Westchester County but made this Nine-Patch child's quilt after she moved west to Virgil in Cortland County in 1797.
The crib quilt was probably made for daughter Charlotte who only lived for a few weeks in September, 1806. The preserved quilt became a memorial.


Paducah Nine Patch
A 19th-century echo from Pat Speth

Today we make block quilts. When searching for an appropriate early American style to recreate for Democracy's 250th anniversary this year we might prefer a repeat block format to the medallion-style, central focus compositions shown at these earlier posts on period quilts.

Sorry, fans of the block quilt!  I cannot find any block-style quilts reliably attributed to 1776-1800, the first quarter century of American independence. Checking my picture files of date-inscribed quilts I do find some with a late-18th century date but now I am not so sure about the reliability of that date. For example:


I wonder if there is a big flaw in my reliance on date-inscribed pieces because the date on the quilt might not be when the patchwork was stitched. It might be the date on a pre-existing backing or supporting fabric. In the Nace Nine-Patch here an old linen sheet was likely trimmed and saved in the backing. That cross stitch inscription in red above is the typical household linen marking stitch often seen on sheets as they were among the most valuable items in a household. Marking sheets with cross stitch embroidery and a date and/or number was considered good housekeeping.

Embroidered block quilt with the date 1783 on the face
Julie Silber Inventory

But......




We have a piece of recycled needlework with the date of the earlier embroidery rather than of the patchwork.

Crosstitched "Amy Perry" and dated 1816
From dealer GBBest on eBay


Hard to read. Has the original inscription on a piece of needlework been altered?

The most reliable date is one on the front of the quilt, stitched to be seen
as in this star quilt dated in the center block
H Werner
1807

Debby Cooney showed the quilt in a 2017 program.
Lori Lee Triplett sent the photo.
I can't find out much about H Werner---Hannah? Werner
New England records included a lot of Hannah's of an age to make 
such a quilt thirty or so years after our Independence.

Another date that may be reliable as it's the focus of the face of the quilt:
"Ann Thankful Mathewson
1815"
Collection of the Rhode Island School of Design 

This nine-patch is the earliest dated block-style quilt the Rhode Island project recorded.
 
From the collection of the late Trish and Donald Herr
Barbara Schenken 1814
(Date on front or back?)
Trish wrote a bit about it in the 1986 edition of the Oral Traditions series:
In the Heart of Pennsylvania, 19th and 20th Century Quiltmaking Traditions


A date in the quilting is usually reliable.

As in this 1816 nine patch that Susie Wimer saw in a museum


Now you have noticed that nearly every one of these block-style quilts
dated in the early 19th century is a nine patch.
A fashion or fad?
Teaching tool?
And a good illustration of the absence of block-style patterns in 18th-century America.

See more of the same at this post:

Monday, December 29, 2025

Caraco Jackets: Fashioning a Hypothesis

 


ModeMuze, Amsterdam

See a recent post featuring these 18th-century chintz garments known by several names:

Caraco
Cassaquin
Kassakeinjte
Kroplattan

The Fries Museum in the Netherlands owns many caracos and other chintz clothing but from what I could see in their catalog (couldn't find an English translation) most sources and places of origin are "Onbekend," or "Unknown."

My Dutch is improving:
Patchwork Quilt: Lappendeken
Chintz: Sits
Cotton: Kataoen



The jacket above has a "Maker: Unknown"
and no entry for Plaats or Place.

One of the few objects I found that had a place of origin:
Child's clothing Place Made: India

Even if you can't read Dutch or can't find the Museum's English catalog do a search for SITZ (chintz) and see some great objects.

I've been collecting pictures for a couple of weeks and went back to look at the captions to see where these were constructed.



Attributed to England, France, the Netherlands and India.

We definitely see recurring style and techniques used in these garments, so much so that it is hard to believe that tailors scattered around the world created such similar objects.

For example, this detail of small-scale trim on sleeves and neck openings is not found in all the garments but in enough to suggest conclusions. Although I have not seen these in the cloth, photo details indicate that the trim is of two types: a print and a woven tape. 

Child's hat in a Dutch museum with the same style of red and white woven tape trim

We might consider edge trim a signature of Dutch style.
But it's much more an indication of Indian style.

Contrasting border edges remain a
design necessity...

...as characteristic of Indian style as the cone shape that the British
borrowed as "Paisley.'.

Border edging for saris (sarees) is still sold as Banarasi Border Lace...

...with little change in classic design as in this trim that is centuries old.

Banarasi Saree
 (quite the elegant and expensive garment)

Based on visual similarities can we assign India as the place of origin for the caraco jackets?
It seems quite likely. Written records are easily found supporting the idea that tailors and garment makers working in India crafted finished clothing for the world market. Most of us are unfamiliar with the European East India Companies' 17th-century buildings in India. Below a print of the Dutch Factory
at Surat.
Note the border on this print from 1634 depicting
the Dutch "Factory" at Surat in 1629.

Factory today means a place where things are fabricated or built. Centuries ago "Factory" meant a building that was more like a “Trading Post” as we called them in America.

Factors or Agents Negotiating

Metropolitan Museum of Art
Image in an India-printed petticoat showing resident 
Dutch factors, their families & pets

The word source is Latin factoria which became a factorium, a location for agents who were commonly called factors at the time. The English (EIC) and the Dutch (VOC) East India Companies built their coastal fortresses for storage, and for agents' housing and offices, to say nothing of intimidation.

Baling cotton for shipping in an Indian factory

Embroiderers

 But production went on in the factories too with local artisans creating trade goods to order.

Artisans who had once worked at home were brought into the factories.

Kalamkari, hand-painting dyes in patterns
Kalam = pen
Kari = art

Changing a way of life.

The factory at Surat faced the Arabian Sea.

Surat in red was in Gujarat, a state well known for its textile trade goods.

European factors managed the factories with Indians working under them as clerks, warehouse workers, printers, weavers and crafters. To see to the English colonialists' spiritual needs the English East India Company sent the Rev. John Ovington (1653–1731) to the Surat factory. He wrote a memoir A Voyage to Surat in 1689, published in 1696.

Ovington's Observations:
A "Bannian," a class of men
with reputations as Accounting Clerks. 
"Tailers here fashion the Cloaths for the Europeans, either Men or Women, according to every Mode that prevails....with as much Skill, as if they had been an Indian fashion, or themselves had been Apprentices [in England.]"

The English factory at Surat from Ovington's book

One can go further into descriptions of the European factories on the Indian coasts, but once you become familiar with the 17th-century model for India/European trade it becomes obvious that textiles were commissioned by the trading companies to be fabricated by Indian textile employees in their factories.

Fries Museum The Netherlands

Many of the chintz caracos preserved around the world were likely to have been fashioned in India in a combination of Indian and European taste and shipped to enthusiastic customers in Holland, France, England and other northern European countries. 

And it would seem from looking at these caracos in various European museums:
Different styles for different customers

It's a little late for me to become a costume historian---I look at quilts. 

Christies' caption for this palampore bedcover
tells us it's quilted in a diamond grid.

Next post: Indian-made bedcovers shipped around the world. UPDATE: I have to read a lot more before I'm ready for that post. Next month!

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Seasonal Sparkle in William Morris Prints

 

Seasonal Sparkle
Pattern below for a 90-inch square quilt
using William Morris reproduction prints

Red & green are the traditional seasonal colors for the end-of-the-year celebrations. The colors have long been popular in Germanic folk arts where many of our American Christmas customs come from.

Becky Collis
Center wreath for Baltimore Belles & Rebels
See more here:

I've been sorting through the reds and green prints in past Morris collections because we're planning a red & green applique block of the month series next year at my Civil War Quilts blog. Model maker Becky Collis is working with Morris prints in the traditional color scheme. Her knock-out version makes you appreciate the classical red and green palette so popular in American applique. Their trick was stitching reds and greens to a white or light-colored background.

You do not see antique quilts with red and green appliqued to a red background or a green one
like this sketch.
Because the color scheme creates visual chaos. 
Not only are the prints fighting for dominance but also red and green are the same value. 
They "clash" because they have similar relative darkness or lightness.

Six Morris prints in greens and reds and a value scale showing green's and red's
common relative lightness or darkness.

Our vision has a hard time with this combination.
One should probably take look at a black & white rendition
of one's designs to see how the value is distributed throughout the
composition. If the values are too close nothing stands out
and sometimes our eyes make a visual mush out of it.

This is the old art teacher talking. The old art teacher also says:

Wait a minute, I love visual chaos. What if the art assignment this week were to create visual chaos with a red and green color scheme?

Subdued Chaos in 
Seasonal Sparkle & Morris Prints



Inspired by this quilt from Julie Silber's vast inventory: