Quilt dated 1828 and signed on the reverse
Jane Allen Nesbitt
Atlanta History Center
This is the earliest panel quilt in our files with a date
actually inscribed on it. The date surprised us at first. When Merikay
began looking at chintz panel quilts they were often thought to have
been made twenty or thirty years earlier.
But now we think this date is quite typical for the style, if a little early.
The American fashion seems to have been at its peak in the 1830s.
Jane's quilt features a panel Merikay has numbered 14, a floral bouquet
tied with a blue ribbon
Notice the olive green leaf here in the panel, which reflects a print style quite popular in
England in the first quarter of the 19th century (the fabrics are earlier than the American quilts
made from them.)
Greens, yellow and browns picturing detailed tree leaves
The quiltmaker had many similar fabrics...
...a nice supply of English chintzes related to what was called "drab style,"
dyed with quercitron that produced fast yellow, greens and browns.
See a post on quercitron here:
The scrap of a pillar print is inserted into the border. The colors
all blend quite well.
Beautiful narrow rolled binding
Pencil marks for the quilting remain.
And that's the end of our adventure in Atlanta.
Thanks to Tara Miller for most of the photos.