QUILTS & FABRIC: PAST & PRESENT


Monday, July 16, 2018

Botanizing #4: Pressed Leaves


Last year on my Civil War Quilts blog
one of the blocks was an autumn leaf.

The pattern is probably a sycamore leaf, drawn from a quilt in
the collection of the Los Angeles Museum of Art.

Leaf tracings are a form of botanizing we see in mid-19th century samplers.
1841-1844 Mary Taylor
Smithsonian Collection

But there aren't many samplers of leaves alone.
Top by Mary Stayman of Leavenworth, Kansas, dated 1923, 
in the collection of the Helen F. Spencer Museum of Art at the University of Kansas.
On the back of each leaf Mary wrote the species name in pencil.

New England leaves (about 1870) from the Binney Collection at
the New England Quilt Museum.


And then there's Ernestine Zaumseil's extravaganza:

Branches & Vines by Ernestine Eberhardt Zaumseil (1828-1904).
She was born in Germany and lived in Ohio, St. Louis, 
and Pekin, Illinois. Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.




Now that is some attention to detail!

4 comments:

  1. Oh wow I loved seeing these leaves in quilts

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  2. I've been away a few days, now I have to catch up with your new posts and photos.
    Thanks for sharing.

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  3. I am really enjoying this series of posts. I have used leaves often, for quilting background areas and borders. I did a "seasons" quilt and my friends in the states sent me some pressed leaves from my home area to include in one border.

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  4. Glorious leaves. Where would we be without leaves and the tree that grow these diverse and interesting shapes.

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