Iris Garland by Hannah Haynes Headlee, Topeka, Kansas, about 1935.
Collection of the Kansas Museum of History.
We've been looking at purple over at the 6KnowItAlls Facebook group, showing off vintage quilts of silk, wool and cotton and discussing the history of the dye in various fibers. Fast purple cotton was once hard to find and the colors were rather muted.
Ask to join the group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/6knowitalls
Detail of the Iris Garland
After World War I, however, a variety of colorfast purple solids became available.
That rainbow of shades must have been an inspiration to quilters
working between the wars, among them Kansan Hannah Haynes Headlee,
an associate of the Emporia applique artists, one of whom used Rose Kretsinger's pattern
to create another purple masterpiece in the Orchid Wreath below.
Orchid Wreath by Ifie Espey Arnold, Emporia, Kansas
Collection of the Helen F. Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas
My version of Rose's wreath with Hannah's blossoms.
Pat Moore showed her Iris Wreath in 2023
Lori Kukuk, who did the long-arm quilting on mine, appliqued her own
and gave it some of her elegant quilting.
Roseanne Smith's Work in Progress
Ilyse Moore used a dark background & tightened up the circle.
As I say, the pattern is in my 2008 book Making History,
still available from C&T Publishing as a digitally produced book for $20.99.
I see that in the Amazon listing for used copies the preview gives you the pattern right there to download. So what the heck. Here it is: Six pages of Iris Wreath.
Print these out on 8-1/2 by 11" sheets.
Hope you are inspired.
Emporians would envy us our batiks.



















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