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Quilters Find a way to care

97208

 

Date: Fri, 08 Aug 1997 22:34:02 -0500
From: Mark Mashaw <mtm@snet.net>


Kris,

I did the sample apple stem game as well to find my husband's first
initial. Unfortuneately, Idon't know if I was ever able to twist the
stem to M before it came off! 
Did you then try and break the apple's skin with the broken off stem? 
However many jabs it took to break the apple's skin resulted in the
second or rather, surname initial! 
Hope your summer is going well and I would very much like to purchase a
pin. I endjoy these digests tremendously and feel privelged to read the
wonderful ideas offered here! Thanks everyone, now back to lurking for
a while. Mary

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 08 Aug 1997 23:08:26 -0400 (EDT)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com
To: rmaietta@csrlink.net, QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: myths
Message-id: <01IM7Q3TSJ7M8WWJAZ@delphi.com>
Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

On 8-AUG-1997 12:34:15.0 rmaietta said to JOCELYNM
> Okay, okay - so I'm joking. Anyone else have any ideas??
> Ricki in PA, successfully putting off a whole bunch of work!
Ricki,
I don't know about quilting myths...but I DO know that making beds when
you first get up is most unsanitary. The sheets need to air out, you see,
and if you don't get back into the bedroom before you leave the
house...well...they will be most sanitarily aired out by the time you get
home. And since you'll be going to bed soon.....<G>

Jocelyn

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 08 Aug 1997 23:08:35 -0400 (EDT)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com
To: debatqps@juno.com, QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Maine searches & customers
Message-id: <01IM7Q3XQSQY8WWJAZ@delphi.com>
Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

On 8-AUG-1997 14:30:39.7 debatqps said to JOCELYNM
> I need a good response to use when someone comes into my shop with a
> family quilt and wants to know "Whats it worth?" There has to be a
> polite response to tell them to stop being money grubbing fools and
>hold onto their heritage if not for them, for their children.
Debbie,
If they're married, ask them what their wedding rings are 'worth'. Ask
them if they would sell them for the value of the gold and gemstones. Most
people would act horrified and say 'NO!'....they have 'sentimental value'.
Then you can talk about how that quilt is really a piece of their family
history, and how once they sell it, it can never be recovered, and how the
quilt SHOULD have sentimental value for their family, just as the wedding
rings do.
Then talk about the quilt...tell the story it tells YOU. Most people
who aren't quilters can't hear the stories on their own, but when they're
explained to them, they're fascinated.
So many people don't have the trained eye to really understand quilts
as history. If the quilt isn't beautiful by 1990s standards, they can't
imagine why they'd want it. I just asked my mom about the quilt she gave my
sister...how it had happened that I'd never seen it. She hemmed and hawed
around, but basically the answer was, that she had always considered it
ugly, and didn't want to use it, and even now, as a quilter herself, she
couldn't quite understand why her daughter would WANT it. <G> Then if you
imagine a person who's never made anything by hand, who doesn't understand
how each era of quilts have their own beauty, and how a quilt that's a
perfect example of what the decade in which it was made thought was
beautiful, has a beauty over and above its design and colors.....well, it's
largely a matter of education, IMO. And some of the folks may not be asking
because they want to sell, but because they're curious, or they want to brag
about the value of the quilt! <G>
Jocelyn

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 07:01:22 -0400 (EDT)
From: Baglady111@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: Re: QHL: dating an embroidered quilt
Message-ID: <970809070120_1283708068@emout11.mail.aol.com>

In a message dated 97-08-07 20:46:11 EDT, you write:

<< 
On 6-AUG-1997 12:39:41.0 lrobins said to JOCELYNM
> Did the markings of kits wash out really easily so that it is possible
> to see no embroidery markings at all while the pencil quilting marks
>>
I reply to your question..I am just back from a lecture in JONESBOROUGH,
TN..(delightful little town) and the quilt on my bed in my hostesses home was
a whtie on white, beautifully quilted, BUT the little blue marks are still
there PROMINENTLY..she did a clever thing tho..she simply reversed it..the
marks are now the UNDER SIDE..and this can be done with a white on
white..alas..MY stamped quilt top..CAN NOT BE TURNED OVER..becareful, lAURA.
maybe the newer kits use different ink..Jane of THE FEEDSACK CLUB

www.his.com/~queenb/feedsack,html
www2.netcom.com/~leelman/feedsack.html

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 09 Aug 1997 09:12:53 -0400 (EDT)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com



On 8-AUG-1997 19:42:10.0 qrs said to JOCELYNM
>ever heard the myth/superstition that the first letter of your future
>husbands last name could be found in the number of twists it takes to
>take the stem off an apple? One twist was A, two twists were B and so
>on. It worked for me...it always took me four twists and my husbands
>name does, in fact, start with "D". Proof positive that these myths
>are grounded in reality.
Kris,
In that case...does it mean all these boys named Zachary are doomed to
be bachelors? <G>
Jocelyn
PS. Yes, I've heard the story. I even remember reading a story as a girl,
about a pioneer girl who learned to twist her apple stems very, very gently,
because she loved a boy named William....<G>

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 09:14:10 -0400
From: Merry May <gridgees@algorithms.com>
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: Various & sundry
Message-Id: <v03007803b012182738e0@[167.152.156.136]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Debbie in NJ wrote:
> I need a good response to use when someone comes into my shop with a
>family quilt and wants to know "Whats it worth?" There has to be a
>polite response to tell them to stop being money grubbing fools and hold
>onto their heritage if not for them, for their children.

This is a tough one to call, because if they're bringing it to you, it
tells me that they already have dismissed it as a family heirloom. At this
point, if they (or someone else in their family) kept it, it could end up
being used as a drop cloth under the car. My first question for them would
be, "Is there ANYONE in your family who might like to have it? It would
certainly mean more to them than to some outsider, and they may even be
willing to pay you something for it." Once that question is answered,
assuming that no one in their family wants it, I would assume the role of
"quilt rescuer." If they want an appraisal, you could direct them to a
qualified quilt appraiser (not necessarily certified, but experienced -
like Julie Powell, for instance). Be sure to tell there there is a fee for
this. (Or, if you have enough experience to be able to give a "rough
estimate," be sure to warn them that there's a fee for that, too - if they
truly want to know the value of the quilt, they should be willing to pay
for your knowledge.) Another alternative I sometimes use, is to refer them
to a reputable local antique dealer who has dealt with quilts enough to be
able to give them an estimate. Of course, dealers have to make a living,
so if the person asks them "What would YOU be willing to pay for it?" the
figure will be far different from "What is the insurance value for this?"
This referral would also relieve you from the pressure of the people asking
you if YOU want to buy it, once you've told them what you think it may be
worth. Sorry this got to be so long, but it's a good question, and one
that shop owners must deal with pretty often.

Alan wrote:
>Well, I, too, have requested the book through interlibrary loan. I'll let
>you know when I get it and how it is.
>Oh, the plumbing is her next volume. <G>

I can just picture it... "Become an instant expert on the history and
value of Plumbing!" <G>

Kris wrote:
>But seriously, I have heard that the first night you sleep under a new
>quilt, you are supposed to dream of your new husband.

Sounds good to me, but what do I do with the "old" one??? :-)



Merry in "down Jersey"
gridgees@algorithms.com

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 09 Aug 1997 08:47:44 -0400
From: Ricki Maietta <rmaietta@csrlink.net>
To: QHL@cuenet.com


Hi everyone. I never heard the story about twisting the apple stem. That's
a good one (quilt related?)

Ricki

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 09:50:31 -0400 (EDT)
From: Quilt97@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: QHL-Digest Digest V97 #207
Message-ID: <970809095030_1116857815@emout01.mail.aol.com>

In a message dated 97-08-09 00:08:24 EDT, you write:

<< debatqps@juno.com >>

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 10:00:40 -0400 (EDT)
From: CToczek@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: myths
Message-ID: <970809100039_98409879@emout16.mail.aol.com>

Kris, 

Yes, I've heard the myth about twists of an apple stem reveal the letter of
your future husband's last name. For me that would be a *T*....<G> I had to
twist pretty lightly to make it last that long! 

And as for dreaming of your new husband when you sleep under a quilt for the
first time.....I completed my very first ever *FOR ME* bed quilt last night
and we slept under it for the first time. <VBG> Maybe I won't tell my
husband who I dreamed about! 

Carla

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 09 Aug 1997 09:13:03 -0500
From: LAURA SYLER <texas_quilt.co@airmail.net>
To: Ricki Maietta <rmaietta@csrlink.net>



Ricki Maietta wrote:

> Hi everyone. I never heard the story about twisting the apple stem. That's
> a good one (quilt related?)

> Ricki

Ricki & all:
Growing up in Central Texas, the apple stem was one of the most popular
lunch time activities of the 4-6 graders!!! And yes, you had to be
VEEEERRRYY careful if you didn't have a crush on someone with the first
initials A thru F....I usually made it to C..or D (X's name...HS
sweetheart... was Claud!) Come to think of it , until I met Robby and
we married 3 years ago, I never even dated anyone above a "G" <G>!
Laura

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 10:31:04 -0400 (EDT)
From: Baglady111@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Fwd: How do you make curved flying geese?
Message-ID: <970809103103_-1637507721@emout19.mail.aol.com>

In a message dated 97-08-09 09:07:56 EDT, gridgees@algorithms.com (Merry May)
writes:

<< 
>Vivian, try Merry may at gridgees@algorithms.com Merry has a device and
>altho I do not know if it does them on a curve..she can sure let you
>know..Jane of THE FEEDSACK CLUB

Jane -
I don't have any idea how Caryl Fallert does her curved flying geese,
unless it's with a hand-drawn paper foundation. Every piece in the curve
would have its own specific shape, so my method wouldn't work.

Is Caryl Fallert on-line? If so, this lady should ask her.
>>

this reply came from Merry and is for Vivian..hope this helps..Jane of the
FEEDSACK CLUB
---------------------
Forwarded message:
From: gridgees@algorithms.com (Merry May)
To: Baglady111@aol.com
Date: 97-08-09 09:07:56 EDT

> does anyone know how to or can point me to any instructions on how to make
>curved
> flying geese? the ones you often see in caryl bryer fallert's quilts.

>Vivian, try Merry may at gridgees@algorithms.com Merry has a device and
>altho I do not know if it does them on a curve..she can sure let you
>know..Jane of THE FEEDSACK CLUB

Jane -
I don't have any idea how Caryl Fallert does her curved flying geese,
unless it's with a hand-drawn paper foundation. Every piece in the curve
would have its own specific shape, so my method wouldn't work.

Is Caryl Fallert on-line? If so, this lady should ask her.

See ya.

Merry in "down Jersey"
gridgees@algorithms.com

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 12:14:20 -0400 (EDT)
From: QuiltFixer@aol.com
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Rattlesnake Quilt
Message-ID: <970809121418_-2006726299@emout11.mail.aol.com>

Many, many thanks to each and every one who took the time to send me a post
on this. I received the photo back and have a better idea what it looked
like. It is a undulating (waving) circle composed of small fans with a small
fan attached and turned around pointing to each of the corners, maybe this
represents the tail?
I plan on continuing to search for information on this block and will share
anything I get. In the meantime, if someone comes across some information, I
would appreciate hearing from you. 

Toni Baumgard
QuiltFixer@aol.com

------------------------------

Date: Fri, 08 Aug 1997 15:17:37 -0400
From: Diane McGuire <dianemcg@ici.net>
To: antique quilts line <QHL@cue.com>



Hi, QHLers,

Julia gave some great information about Clorox 2 (sodium perborate) as a 
cleaning solution for stains. I would like to mention another product I 
have used to eliminate really bad well water rust stains from my 
bathroom fixtures, 100% cotton white sheets and towels. It is "Rooto" 
Rust, Iron Stain Remover, Cleaner. I bought 20 oz. for $4.29 at the 
hardware store. It is Sodium Busulfite (NaHSO3) and Sodium Hydrosulfite 
(Na2 S2 O4 2H2O). I think other companies sell it under different names. 
Please note: VAPORS HARMFUL and TOXIC if ingested. I am mentioning the 
product because it DOES work when nothing else I tried has worked, but 
it should probably be a last resort. It did not seem to harm the fabric. 
I used only about a tablespoon in a load of laundry.

To add to Ricki's list of new "myths" we can spread:

Instead of joining a health club, shop for fabric: Stretching exercises 
in reaching for bolts, weight lifting multiple bolts, aerobic sprinting 
up and down the aisles to match colors, etc.

The faster you sew on your machine, the more calories you burn (chain 
piece away!)

I think we might be on to something here.

Diane in Massachusetts

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 09 Aug 1997 14:54:02 -0400 (EDT)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com
To: gridgees@algorithms.com, QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Re: Various & sundry
Message-id: <01IM8N48C7GY8WWPHI@delphi.com>
Content-type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=US-ASCII

On 9-AUG-1997 09:26:44.6 gridgees said to JOCELYNM
> >But seriously, I have heard that the first night you sleep under a new
> >quilt, you are supposed to dream of your new husband.
> Sounds good to me, but what do I do with the "old" one??? :-)
Merry,
Recycle! <G>
You've not seen the chain letter for Significant Others? <G> You send
it to 6 of your friends, and send your SO to the woman on the top of the
list. When your name rises to the top, you'll receive 216 men...one of whom
is bound to be an improvement....<BG>
Jocelyn

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 09 Aug 1997 14:54:11 -0400 (EDT)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com
To: rmaietta@csrlink.net, QHL@cuenet.com



On 9-AUG-1997 09:40:12.2 rmaietta said to JOCELYNM
> Hi everyone. I never heard the story about twisting the apple stem.
>That's a good one (quilt related?)
Ricki,
Yes and no. <G> It was of the era of quilting bees, and I'm sure it WAS
practiced at quilting bees, but I don't think there was an inherent link. I
HAVE heard that if you could peel an apple and leave the peel in one piece,
and toss it over your shoulder, it will form the initial of your future
husband. So much the better for all those poor Williams and Zacharys. <G>
As for quilting with brides, there's the legend that a girl should
never use a heart motif in her quilts until she is married. She should have
12 quilttops ready to quilt before she announces her engagement, and the
engagement should be announced at a quilting bee. Her married kinsfolk make
and quilt the 'bridal' quilt with the heart motifs, but the bride can help
quilt on the 12 tops SHE made. After finishing a quilt, all the unmarried
girls stand around the edges, holding it level as if it were still in the
frame. Someone else tosses a cat onto the center of the quilt. The girls
bounce the quilt, to make the cat jump off it, and the one closest to the
departing cat, is the next to marry! <G> (this works for ANY quilt, not just
quilts being quilted for a bride-to-be....and only works, I suppose, if the
cat doesn't get a claw into the prospective bride. <G>)
Bachelors should never be given a quilt whose name implies movement, or
they will move off and leave their family. WANDERING FOOT is a particularly
bad choice! <G> A boy's women relatives would make him a 'freedom' quilt for
his 21st birthday, because up until that time, he owed his labor to his
father as a repayment for the cost of raising him, and at 21 he was now
'free' to establish himself on his own (and since he wasn't yet financially
ready to marry, he had to be able to equip a home for himself).
Jocelyn

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 14:17:32 -0700
From: "heather blessington" <hblessington@hotmail.com



Hi everyone- I wanted to thank everyone for there quick response to my
first posting about Wisconsin Quilters. I info was greatly appreciated 
and it has sent me in some new directions in my documentary research.

I've been wondering how everyone feels about documentaries? Do you think 
that having a visual document of past quilters and their history is a 
great idea- or do you think it could take some of the fun out of your 
quilt research? I started wondering about this as I read the made up 
myths about "sleeping under an antique quilt and dreaming about it's 
maker." 

It seems that most of you writing on this list have spend a great deal
of time and energy researching quilt history, and you truly seem to be 
passionate about it. I'm just wondering if we continue accurately 
documenting every aspect of quilting (as the national organizations are 
attempting to do)where will it put our quilt research in fifty years? 
What will we study if it's all neatly laid out for us?

One final thought in regards to the "money grubbers" who want to sell
off their family history. I might be way off here, but what if I 
included them in the documentary? I thought I may be kind of 
interesting to show both sides of the coin.

I'll look forward to your thoughts-
Heather at hblessington@hotmail.com


______________________________________________________
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 14:17:32 -0700
From: Opalka <mopalka@alaska.net> (by way of Quilting Heritage ListServ <qrs@mail.albany.net>)
To: QHL@cuenet.com
Subject: QHL: Alaska
Message-Id: <2.2.16.19970809170437.3e67612e@mail.albany.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Hello Quilters, I am so excited that Jane Huisignh will be visiting Alaska
beginning this week. Then, Julia from California will be arriving at the
end of this month. I think this iwll be so neat to meet two quilters via
the internet! These are the first two that I will have met. Anymore of
you coming this way? Susan(in Alaska where it is 58, rainy and beautiful!)

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 16:27:58 -0500
From: cabhoney@juno.com (Cindy A Honeycutt)
To:


One good source to find older quilters for an interview would be your
local senior citizens center. Another source would be your Area Wide
Aging Agency. If you are lucky, they might be able to fix you up with
someone who quilts. Also guilds will prbably know some older quilters.

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 16:31:43 -0500
From: cabhoney@juno.com (Cindy A Honeycutt)
To: Q



Just went to the central Oklahoma Quilt show today. It was great! One
thing I saw that I would like to have a copy of if anyone has it is a
1920-1930 pattern that was printed in the Daily Oklahoman. It was called
the Peter Pan series and is a series of embroidered patterns about the
Peter Pan characters. I bought a child's quilt like this at an auction
and didn't know until today how all the pictures related. I know I could
buy the whole book that had lots of other patterns in it, but if anyone
has a copy of just the Peter Pan series in it or an article about it,
that's what I'm interested in. If not, I will probably end up buying the
whole entire book. What fun it is to solve a small mystery about a quilt!
Cindy Honeycutt, Norman, Ok

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 09 Aug 1997 17:48:48 EDT
From: jbsews@juno.com (Joan F Brown)
To:



Hi Toni,
Maybe the pointing corners are the snake bite.
Joan
sew much to do, sew little time

It is a undulating (waving) circle composed of small fans with 
>a small
>fan attached and turned around pointing to each of the corners, maybe 
>this
>represents the tail?

>Toni Baumgard
>QuiltFixer@aol.com
>

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 23:35:26 -0400
From: "J. G. Row" <Judygrow@blast.net>
To: "



I just got the letter today -- my quilt, Hedgerows, made it into the
Pennsylvania National Quilt Extravaganza IV, to be held Sept 11-14 in Fort
Washington. I am so pleased, I just had to crow a little. My husband urged
me to enter and was sure it would be accepted. He is so pleased that he is
right. 

Normally, I have to get the mail down at the mailbox when I come home from
work at night, but today, knowing I was looking for the letter, he walked
all the way down the driveway, got the mail, walked all the way back up
again (or was he on the mower), and then called me at work to tell me. 

So now I have to check to see that my sleeve is 4 inches, cover the block
on the front where I signed the quilt in ink, and make a label for the back
with all the info they want.

We are going to hand deliver the quilt, and pick it up at the close of the
show because we live so close. They did enclose a memo about choosing some
other sender if UPS is still on strike.

Did anyone else make in? Let's hear you crow, too.

Judy in NJ
judygrow@blast.net

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 23:34:11 -0400 (EDT)
From: HPQuilting@aol.com
To: 


Are there any experts on quilt appraisal/restoration in the Birmingham,
Alabama area? If so, contact me privately at HPQuilting@aol.com. I have the
names of 4-5 folks in Trussville who need someone to look at Grandma's
quilts.

Penny(HPQuilting@aol.com)

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 19:52:10 -0500
From: lessmann@earthlink.net (Ellen Lessmann)


I stopped by at The Kirk Collection on my way home from work (one of the
*best* things about my job--The Kirk Collection is between work and home),
and talked to Nancy about an idea I had for the Conference. She agreed
(and has so many ideas), so--when you arrive at the conference, please
tell the registration people you are on QHL, and they will mark your name
tags so others will be able to identify you. Hope to set aside an area at
lunch Saturday where QHL'ers can visit and possibly make plans for Saturday
night.
Now--I hope to be able to meet some of you at the Conference (I'm
having trouble getting the time off from work--One of the *worst* things
about my job!)
Ellen in Omaha

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 23:34:17 -0400 (EDT)
From: HPQuilting@aol.com
To: 


I really agree with Jocelyn on this. For many people in their 60's and 70's,
quilts were never really a part of their lives. A great many of these folks
were raised by parents who often associated quilts with poverty and want. It
was a bedcovering made of scraps because there was no money for anything
else. As a result, when the 50's began to bring prosperity to the country,
the old quilts were relegated to storage and bedspreads were purchased
instead. 
As Jocelyn said, if you love the story of the quilt and you tell it with
love, often people get really caught up in it. We all need a history and a
heritage and, if the story is told with the listener in mind, it will very
often spark a wonderful longing in the listener for a past that they can
identify with.
This past weekend, I had the wonderful opportunity of sharing some of the
great heritage that African-Americans have in this country with regard to
their quilts. I wish every one of you could have seen her eyes light up with
wonder and interest. As a result, she wants me to teach a quilting class in
Montgomery to a group of African-Americans. (I should point out that I am as
white as you can get!) Before our conversation, a quilt was just a quaint
bedcovering she had seen her grandmother make. After a few minutes of sharing
what contributions had been made by the African-American people to the field
of quilting, she feels that she owns a part of that history.
I guess what I am attempting to say is that it is our job to educate people
as to the true, non-material value of these family hierlooms. If, after we
inform them, they are still so mean that they see nothing but the material
value, then the quilt should be sold to someone who values it properly.

Penny(HPQuilting@aol.com)

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 21:52:20 -0400 (EDT)
From: JKusnitz@aol.com
To: 



Hi, does anyone know of a book that discusses the different dyes used on
fabrics and which ones they used to make the different colors on quilts of
the 18th and 19th centuries?
Helene

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 9 Aug 1997 22:36:08 -0700
From: cauch@cfw.com (by way of Quilting Heritage ListServ



Anyone with knowledge of NC regional icons/quilt history or references would
be appreciated-

I recently spent some time on the NC side of Buggs Island Lake and this part
of NC and also in Southside VA has a strong history in tobacco farming. The
sign entering one town still says "Tobacco is Gold {here}" ands warehouses/
auction houses are along the highways.

***I do NOT want to argue or discuss merits, hazards, politics, ***

but I do wonder if there are quilt blocks that would represent tobacco
farming. The leaf is distinct especially when it flowers late summer. I
don't want cigarettes or cigars but the plant or something of that
kind...reflecting the farm not the manufacturers.

My granddaddy's 90th birthday will be next year and a cousin made a quilt
called "Tree of Life" for his 80th but I though I 'd try to figure a North
Carolina quilt of sorts. They've been there since 1946 and the ties are so
strong. 

Another thought leans toward Jugtown pottery and things native to NC...I
have a while to come up with ideas. I only have to stay away from Carolina
Blue <g> 
Thanks for any ideas

Christina in the Blue Ridge of VA

------------------------------

Date: Sat, 09 Aug 1997 19:25:16 -0500
From: LAURA SYLER <texas_quilt.co@airmail.net>


Cindy A Honeycutt wrote:

> One good source to find older quilters for an interview would be your
> local senior citizens center. Another source would be your Area Wide
> Aging Agency. If you are lucky, they might be able to fix you up with
> someone who quilts. Also guilds will prbably know some older quilters.

Also, don't forget to contact the Methodist Churches. That's not to say
that other demoninations don't quilt but, at least here in Texas, it
seems that every Methodist church has a quilting group, and they tend to
be seniors.

Laura

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 10:14:30 -0400 (EDT)
From: JZgliniec@aol.com
To: 



<< I've been wondering how everyone feels about documentaries? >>
Dear Heather,

Documentaries and films about quiltmaking are a wonderful addition to the
information available for teachers.

I have been teaching the same Community Education class since 1987. There
are a handful of people who started in 1987 and THEY ARE STILL THERE. I try
to do something different each semester or at least present something
different or more challenging for the classes I do repeat.

Films are a great way to break up the semester and give people time to catch
up for the next lesson. There are at present only a handful of films that I
show. "Hearts and Hands" is the all time favorite and we can see it over and
over. The Boise Piece Project and Quilts in Women's lives are others that
the class has enjoyed. I would welcome more of this quality.

Regards,
Julia

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 10:14:33 -0400 (EDT)
From: JZgliniec@aol.com
To:


Dear Christina,

There is a wonderful pattern called Tobacco Leaf. One version is
pieced...pictured in Brackman #2760. The other is applique # 5.24 in
Brackman's Encyclopedia of Applique patterns. It is also pictured in Mary
Schafer and Her Quilts by Marston and Cunningham.

If you are unable to located these refs. let me know, I can scan you a
picture.

Regards, Julia.....NC is a favorite stare of mine. My last quilt was called
"Carolina Revisited"

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 11:59:28 -0400
From: "J. G. Row" <Judygrow@blast.net>
To: "Quilt History List" <QHL@cuenet.com>, <Qltldy10@aol.com>
Subject: Re: QHL: PA Quilt Show
Message-Id: <199708101549.LAA15197@fireball.blast.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

Beth, The quilt is called "Hedgerows", and is scrappy greens on a light
tan background in a barn raising set. It looks kind of 3-dimensional.

I don't know what they mean about bad vending. I have always spent scads
of money there, as have many of my friends. I never ran across anyone who
discounts fabric there -- whish I knew who. I think it is a better show
than Lancaster. The quilts are easier to see, the lighting is better,
there is more room in the vendor spaces, and it is easier to find them. It
is probably sour grapes, because they just didn't do well. Maybe his
prices were just too high, or they didn't have an attractive display, or
maybe they were just grumpy.
Judy in NJ
judygrow@blast.net
----------
'

 From: Qltldy10@aol.com
> To: judygrow@blast.net
> Subject: Re: QHL: PA Quilt Show
> Date: Sunday, August 10, 1997 9:18 AM

> Judy-- I didn't enter a quilt, but I'll be there...what is your quilt's
> "name"?. I went to Images in Massachusetts yesterday, and talked to the
> vendors from Wisconsin who always have the great repros. They said they
> would not be going to the Extravaganza any more because vending os so bad
> there. She said there is some guy who discounts fabric... I went last
year,
> and have no idea who she means! Beth in Maine

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 12:19:24 -0400 (EDT)
From: SadieRose@aol.com
To: 



Christina & others interested in NC patterns:
Quilter's Newsletter Magazine did a feature on North Carolina patterns in
the June 1980 issue, pgs 16-17, 19-20. They even showed 2 quilts combining
several of the patterns. Here is a list of the patterns included:
Star of North Carolina
New Star of North Carolina
North Carolina Lily (2 versions)
North Carolina Rose
North Carolina Beauty
Carolina Favorite
Raleigh
Dogwood Blossom
Pinecone
Tobacco Leaf
North Carolina Dogwood 

Hope this gives you some ideas for your quilt!! 
Karan from cool & sunny Iowa 

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 12:21:17 -0400 (EDT)
From: JOCELYNM@delphi.com
To: 


On 9-AUG-1997 17:07:50.7 hblessington said to JOCELYNM
> passionate about it. I'm just wondering if we continue accurately
> documenting every aspect of quilting (as the national organizations are
> attempting to do)where will it put our quilt research in fifty years?
> What will we study if it's all neatly laid out for us?
Heather,
I think the first round of documentation is the 'just the facts,
m'am'. If we were EVER able to get all the facts, then there's the REALLY
interesting stories: why were those choices made? What was there about this
quilter that made making this quilt inevitable? What else was going on in
her/his life at the time? Why did THIS person quilt, and so many other
people similarly situated never take up quilting?
Each quilt could take hours to document like that. Imagine going
through someone's scrapboxes, and listening to the stories about how they
got their fabric!
Nope...as long as quilts are being made, there'll be need for more
documentation than we can ever do! <G>
Jocelyn

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 12:52:39 -0400
From: Diane McGuire <dianemcg@ici.net>
To: 



Just read that Caryl Bryer Fallert will be giving a class on graduated 
curve flying geese on Friday, November 7th at A Quilters' Gathering in 
Westford MA. I have the catalogue if anyone wants more information. 

Unfortunately I will be back teaching school then and will not be able 
to go to the class.

Diane in Massachusetts

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 13:41:14 -0400
From: "Briggs Family" <briggs@erie.net>
To: 



Greetings,
I am a new member and have a question. I recently inherited a quilt top
made from strips of fabric that horses were decorated with in the parade
celebrating the 100 years of our town (We recently celebrated the 200th
anniversary of the town to give you an idea of the age of the material
involved.) My great (or great-great) grandfather was in charge of these
horses that were used to deliver packages that were bought at the dry goods
store in town. After the parade he brought the strips home to his wife.
The question I have is how to clean and care for it. It is red and white
with a few brown stains on it. I am afraid to wash it due to the color
red. It is in really good shape and I would like to quilt it. It is all
hand sewn and it seems to be a twenty five patch of the red and white
alternating with a large white block. Any ideas as to how I should quilt
it? I would like to maintain the whole theme of the era. Any suggestions
as to cleaning it?
Rosemary

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 20:59:09 -0400 (EDT)
From: Palampore@aol.com
To: 



In reference to the tobacco NC theme.... I am from a tobacco farm in NC. In
searching for the Alamance Plaids in quilts I went on a search among older
relatives.
When I kept only seeing 50's and 60's quilts I asked why no one had really
old quilts.
My aunt (late 70's) said they were all used to cover tobacco to protect it on
the way to market. Old quilts were no big deal, they could always make more,
but a good tobacco crop meant their livlihood all year and maybe the next if
they had a poor crop. She said that burlap sacks were not widely used until
the 60's. My grandmother had lots of old quilts. I assume that was because
her husband had a farm implement business and rented out his farm land. I
found this story very interesting.
Check for other NC related patterns in quilts in the NCQUILTS book. Lynn in
NC

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 20:25:09 -0400
From: suewho@juno.com (Susanne Ellenberger)
To:


Mary,
What a wonderful returning home present from Alabama to have your message
and how your quilt weathered the Buttermilk Recipe as well as the Fels
Naptha. It probably was a combination of all of those and I am sure the
lemon juice did it's thing and took out the tough stain. I am always so
amazed to see how well this recipe does. Your Fels Naptha dental tabs
recipe sounds interesting. I will have to try that one.

As a matter of fact, I found the greyed muslin in Alabama this past week
and I bought all they had. Now I can finish my son's wedding present. I
have been hunting all over and God took me to Alabama to find the right
color of fabric. I also bought lots more fabric. It was a wonderful
trip to Alabama. Got to meet so many wonderful southern people who were
so warm and friendly. You would be amazed at how many quilters there are
in Alabama.

Thanks for sharing your success story with us
Susanne Ellenberger
One Stitch At A Time :>)

In Ohio

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Date: Sun, 10 Aug 1997 21:42:35 EDT
From: jbsews@juno.com (Joan F Brown)
To: 



Hello Group,
After reading Julia's post I have a question, I have the book
Hearts and Hands. I had borrowed it from my library and fell in love with
it. I then tried to order it and found it was out of print. I went to a
hard to find book seller and was successful in getting the book.
Is the video available anywhere? I am sure it is done in
excellent taste and style. If it is no longer available is making a copy
out of the question because of copyright laws.
Joan
sew much to do, sew little time