QUILTS & FABRIC: PAST & PRESENT


Thursday, June 12, 2014

Broken Star Variations

I found this variation on the large central star quilt at the Smithsonian website.

It looks like the quilter had many of the parts for the standard Broken Star 
(BlockBase # 4007.5)
as in the Amish example above---
but followed her own muse.

Some quilters added their own ideas
and some subtracted a few parts. This one with a pink
border and diamonds of claret red and indigo prints may
be about 1900.

Mid 20th century?

From the Winedale collection at the University of Texas
Here the central star has been subtracted

And here some corners have been added.

I'm glad I stopped indexing patterns in the early 1970s. People have been
exercising a lot of creative options with this star geometry

particularly the Amish as in these two recent quilts


And the Lakota people as in the one below.

Red Bottom Tipis from the Smithsonian site.

I'm calling all these variations on BlockBase # 4077.5

See more about plain old
BlockBase # 4007.5 at this post:

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Modernism, Anachronisms & Jane Austen


 Anachronism: chronological inconsistency

Above we have Jane Austen from about 1810 in a dress print from about 1910.

I don't think she'd buy into this idea.

Block 1 Bright Star for Jane Austen
by Cookie's Creek

But a few of the participants in my Austen Family Album quilt block of the week are making up the patterns in my 2013 reproduction line Modernism, which echoes the early 20th century.



Block 1 Bright Star for Jane Austen
by PinkDeenster

Block 2 Sister's Choice for Cassandra Austen
by Pink Deenster

Block 3 Cross Within Cross for George Austen
by Cookie's Creek


Block 3 Cross Within Cross for George Austen
by PinkDeenster

Block 4 Thrifty for Mrs. Austen
by Cookie's Creek


Block 4 Thrifty for Mrs. Austen
by Dustin Cecil


Block 7 Philadelphia Block for Aunt Phila by Cookie'sCreek

I Photoshopped some blocks

and added virtual borders



See our Flickr page here:

Thursday, June 5, 2014

A Few Broken Stars



Here is a great idea but one not often seen. While there are many large Star-of-Bethlehem-style quilts with applique in the empty spots, here is a vintage Broken Star filled in with flora and fauna.

Looking at the photos posted in the online auction one would
guess it's 1840-1880 by applique style and what little
glimpsed of the fabrics. It may be after 1880, which actually makes more sense...

Because the broken star pattern itself tends to have been made
after 1880.


When I indexed these large stars I gave this pattern the number 4007.5. In BlockBase the earliest published references I show are from the 1920s and '30s with Capper's Weekly (a farm magazine from Kansas) calling it Broken Star on June 15, 1925. That's the name that became the standard.

Broken Star pattern from a Mountain Mist batting wrapper

There are not many mid-19th century examples of the star inside a ring of star points.

Emiline R. Miller, Eastern Pennsylvania
Collection of the International Quilt Study Center and Museum.
Curators date this variation to 1835-55.

Mennonite or Amish?
Late 19th-early 20th century?

I've been sorting my pictures of star quilts over the past few months and the file on #4007.5 is full of later quilts. Many are  Amish or Mennonite dating to the early 20th century like the one below by an Amish woman.

By Amanda Schrock, collection of the Illinois
State Museum and the Quilt Index.
Let's hope Amanda never saw how fugitive those blues turned out to be.

Made for Elsie Otto's wedding 1960,
in the Amish community in
Topeka, Indiana

Quilt dated 1887 in the collection of the International
Quilt Study Center and Museum. #2003.003.0159
Holstein Collection.

Perhaps based on the above pattern structure seen in Pennsylvania quilts
at the end of the 19th-century.

The majority of the vintage examples are from
the 20th century, but often hard to date within that
range because many were made from kits of pre-cut diamonds.

Signed on the back
M Fiene 1940



The diamonds are often cut from plain cottons.The only clues
to date might be subtle changes in taste in greens or color vibrancy.

An Aunt Martha kit

1940? 1990?

?



Aunt Martha/Colonial Quilts still sells kits:
http://www.colonialpatterns.com/shop/category/broken-star-quilt-kits/

Some quilters cut their own pieces from prints,
which makes the quilts somewhat easier to date



This top makes it easy to see why the kits were so popular.
This one is never going to lay flat.

Tim at TimQuilt's posted about some of the kits and die-cut quilts in his collection.
http://timquilts.com/2013/06/29/more-about-lone-star-quilts/

Monday, June 2, 2014

Ladies's Album in an Apple Core

To the Core kit and pattern, a scrap quilt
using my Ladies' Album reproduction fabric collection
from Moda.

 See the pattern in Fons & Porter's Quilting Quickly, Summer 2014

57" x 70"
The quilt uses 3 Layer Cakes of Ladies' Album prints
or 99 squares 10" x 10"

See more here:


And watch a free video on how to cut and piece here:

They show you how to cut the apple core shape from
a 10" square using their core template and how to
stitch those easy curves by machine.


If you are looking to improve your piecing skills this would be a good pattern.