QUILTS & FABRIC: PAST & PRESENT


Wednesday, October 30, 2024

Political Roses: Radical Rose?

 

In the last post we discussed Whig Roses, which seem to be
central 8-lobed florals with 8 identical rotating buds.


In her 1915 book Marie Webster told us a tale of the Radical Rose, which
she did not picture.

 Her story above is filled with the typical casual racism of her time and seems to be
making fun of old ladies who had country accents.
And it's not believable.
Has anyone ever seen a circa 1860 appliqued floral with a black center?


I'd doubt it mainly because black cotton was not really available. Dyes that gave cotton a true black were harsh, tending to rot or fade quickly. The black silk in the quilt above is an all too familiar sight in the annals of black in antique quilts. 

Attributed to Margaret Smith, Loudon County, Tennessee

I am always looking for a circa 1860 rose with some kind of black as support for Webster's story,
but so far none. Although I have a lot of great rose pictures.

Many from online auctions as the simple roses
were so popular.

Here's a pattern for the rose above---12" Finished Block.

Simple and complex


7 comments:

  1. Love this pattern, but have only made one such block as part of a friendship quilt. Wish my applique skills had been better way back then! I don’t believe that anyone would ever put a black center in such a colorful block.

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  2. Hi, Barbara, I appreciate all that you do for us. I have a question but I don't know how to contact you other than writing here. I'm studying your (older edition) Encyclopedia and I found a simple block 1351 that has no name, just says see 1256, but 1256 is nothing like it. can you please help? thank you

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    Replies
    1. I was never good with numbers. Must be a typo.

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    2. surely editors verified this before publishing...but i would just like to know the name of block 1351, please.

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    3. Sorry, my head is full of block numbers these days. it's 3151!

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