All of us around the world are devastated by this week’s horrific events in Ukraine. We are wondering what we can do to help. This is one idea.
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Monday, February 28, 2022
How to help Etsy sellers in the Ukraine
Thursday, February 24, 2022
New ‘Sewing Basket’ location
A new Sewing Basket store selling donated goods is about to open in Sydney’s southern suburbs, with ‘an extensive range of fabrics and patterns, patchwork, embroidery materials, knitting and crochet yarn, haberdashery, and more’.
The new store opens at 11-13 President Avenue, Caringbah is open from 9:00 am on 1 March.
Saturday, February 19, 2022
Summer quilts (2)
We are still holding our regular meetings on Zoom, so there is limited quilt sighting. Here is what some of our members are making …
Sue’s current community quilt project uses low volume and medium-dark tones to great advantage. |
A summer breeze is very welcome … |
… and makes for fun photos. |
Jill’s son asked if she could make him a ‘stars in the night’ quilt, with just black and white … and zebras? |
He had a very clear idea of how it should look, and recommended that she start with the stars. So she did, and he likes it. There will be zebras on the back as well. |
Dana is making the most of not-so-summery weather to make progress hand quilting her Liberty Rigel quilt, with a fluffy ‘helper’. |
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
Some quilt history stories
The National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) in Melbourne is raising funds to purchase the quilt ‘Housetop Variations 1930s’ made by Gees Bend quilter Martha Pettway:.
This quilt, from the 1930s, is by leading quilt-maker Martha Pettway, featuring the ‘Housetop’ pattern – a design of concentric squares – unique to Gee’s Bend. Pettway used vibrant domestic cotton fabrics on the face of the quilt, while the reverse features a backing comprised of rice, sugar and fertiliser bags. This use of readily available materials underscores the socio-historic context of quilt production of the time.
With your support NGV has a rare opportunity to acquire this important hand-stitched quilt by Martha Pettway, one of the most important quilters of Gee’s Bend.
A short video presentation on the proposed acquisition (and how to donate towards it) is on the NGV website: https://www.ngv.vic.gov.au/support-us/ngv-foundation/help-tell-a-new-story-in-the-ngv-collection/(NGV on Facebook, 23 December 2021)
6Originally made from old, recycled fabrics, the traditional kantha cloth is an example of 'flat', or unwadded quilting, worked on multiple layers of fabric. Bangladeshi or Bengali kantha cloths were made by women for use in their own homes as bedcovers, mats and all-purpose wrappers. The stitching consists of embroidered patterns, ranging from simple floral motifs to elaborate scenes, combined with running-stitch quilting in a colour matching the background fabric. On older quilts, the quilting runs around the embroidered motifs, a technique known as echo quilting … Victoria and Albert Museum
‘… The lives of the working poor were rarely recorded in Georgian Britain, we know so much about Joe the Quilter because he was made famous by his death. A plan of his house was made, and a list of its contents, as they were subsequently auctioned …’. Bowes Museum Blog, 18 September, 2015
The Bellamy Quilt, Norwich Castle Museum
Welcome to the wonderful Bellamy Quilt: a spectacular love story in textiles. The Bellamy Quilt was made by a couple, Charlotte Alice Springall and Herbert Bellamy, who worked on it together during their year-long engagement between 1890 and 1891. They were eventually married 129 years ago today, on the 24th November 1891, in the parish church of St Nicholas, Great Yarmouth. What a brilliant way to spend time really getting to know each other before taking those wedding vows! … Ruth Battersby Tooke, Senior Curator of Costume and Textiles, Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery, 24 November 2020
Quilts for a Living: The Harness Family
Molanie Lowe Harness's husband Jerry was killed in a coal mining accident in Briceville, Tennessee in 1919 when she was pregnant with her 14th child. Daughter Anna Opal was about five and recalled the hard times of her childhood in the Appalachia of Anderson County for interviewer John Rice Irwin in the 1980s … Barbara Blackman, Women’s Work: Making a living making quilts, 4 June 2019
Saturday, February 12, 2022
Summer quilts (1)
We are still holding our regular meetings on Zoom, so there is limited quilt sighting. Here is what some of our members have been up to over the summer, all made as gifts …
This Sewmiriam Braidy Bunch quilt was made for a dear friend to celebrate a special birthday. You can see a close up of the hand quilting on Instagram @sewmiriam. |
Louise used some quiet time to finish off this little beauty for the baby next door. |
Jill made a simple patchwork cushion for her daughter with the very last pieces of her Maze and Vale hand screen printed fabrics. |