Search This Blog

I am a quilter living in Woodbridge, Suffolk who has made quilts since I was a teenager. I also ring bells! Both are great British traditions....I will try to feature some of my antique Welsh and Durham quilts, the quilts I make myself, my quilting activities and also some of my bellringing achievements. Plus as many photos as I can manage. NB: Double click on the photos to see greater detail, then use back button to return to the main page.













Saturday 25 July 2015

Cumbrian strippy

Here is a strippy quilt that I bought recently - it came from a sale at a house near Brampton, Cumbria. That said, it does not have the wave pattern, but instead has a variety of border patterns.


The colour looks gold and cream in this photo, but in actuality is gold and a peach colour...somewhat odd combo, but as sateen stocks dwindled after the war, perhaps not every colour was available....


The central panel has a flower pattern...then a twist in a circle with cross hatching, a larger twist and another bellows pattern with flower...all symmetrically arranged...


 A closer look at some of the quilting patterns..


The reverse is the gold colour....somewhat unusually for North Country quilts, this has a hand sewn edge....


 The edge of the quilt...stiches fairly large, so a club quilt?

However, the strips have been sewn together using a sewing machine...

 A photo of the twist....a nice quilt with attractive colours...not much used...size is 74 x 84 inches.

Monday 20 July 2015

Another Tea Cosy!

This little tea cosy came from North Shields on Tyneside, and nothing more is known about it....
Probably made in the 1930s-1940s. 


The back is plain, and the inner lining is in cream linen


The front has a corded design (Italian quilting) in a heart pattern. 


 The quilting is nicely done, but this tea cosy does not seem to have been used. Small items such as these were popular to make in sewing or quilting classes, and they were also popular as wedding or housewarming gifts...

Monday 6 July 2015

Turkey Red and Hexagon Coverlet


Here is a coverlet that I bought recently. It was found on Tyneside by a dealer, at the bottom of a box of textiles. It looks as if either a hexagon top was shared out by cutting it in half, or less likely, someone did not finish a project. You can see that the border design has been cut in half....and then a border of turkey red fabrics added......



The turkey red prints are OK in some areas..but in a few, the overprinted green has perished....must have been a different lot of dye? It is very specific to these areas, as shown in this photo....

Turkey red prints were popular from 1870 to 1890 but continued to be made and used after that....
The Colouring the Nation book states that yellow blue and green indicate a pre 1865 date.....but I'm sure many are later than this..


The hexagons are small but well sewn....no papers, but oddly enough, many of the basting threads are still in place and were not removed...a picot print here and a seaweed or branch pattern, these were popular over a long period, from 1820 to 1900.


This conversation print is seen several times on this coverlet, these were popular from 1875 to 1900. They were popular for shirtings and childrens clothes. The fabric seen here with the horseshoe and whip is a dimity, a ribbed fabric popular for underclothes, childrens clothes and nightwear....it derives from the latin for "two threads".


And here is a half mourning print. Mourning rules were observed during the Victorian era...



The underside shows that the top has faded, colours were originally much brighter!


Careful fussy cutting of the hexagons...more half mourning fabrics....


Another rossette with conversation/dimity fabrics....


More fussy cutting...much attention paid when the top was made....basting threads visible here...


More interesting prints...


Striped fabrics used to good effect..


The reverse of the top, showing the brighter, original colours..


And many of the fabrics are textured, as here. It is hard to date this top, as we know that ragbags often held older fabrics. But the centre of the top is probably 1880 to 1890....this top was definitely used on a bed, which is of interest. It added a lively touch to someones bedroom, and altough the top was undoubtedly special (special enough to merit being divided in half?) it was not put away unused as a "best" quilt.....