america’s quilting history

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America’s Quilting History • There are stories of how quilting was used to help the slaves escape through the Underground railroad. A log cabin quilt hanging in a window with a black center for the chimney hole was said to indicate a safe house.

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America’s Quilting History. There are stories of how quilting was used to help the slaves escape through the Underground railroad. A log cabin quilt hanging in a window with a black center for the chimney hole was said to indicate a safe house. Flying Geese. Flying Geese. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: America’s Quilting History

America’s Quilting History

• There are stories of how quilting was used to help the slaves escape through the Underground railroad. A log cabin quilt hanging in a window with a black center for the chimney hole was said to indicate a safe house.

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Flying Geese

Flying Geese

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• Controversy remains as to weather the quilts had hidden messages or where they just symbols to represent personal beliefs

• Did "Triangles in quilt design signify prayer messages or did  Flying Geese tell slaves to head north.   

• instructed slaves to travel in whatever direction the 2 darkest triangles were then pointed, making the way the quilt was displayed critical.   

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EUROPEAN AMERICAN QUILTING TRADITIONS

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Victorian crazy quilt

Single men often purchased quilts, as did affluent women for the decoration of their homes and beds.

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Amishcross within a cross

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• Strongest reason for the rise of quilt making in the American colonies is utility.

• Women needed to be able to use available materials, like the quilt pictured here made out of feed sacks, in order to save scarce money.

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• Often quilts were made in order to record a specific event or celebration -- the birth of a child, a wedding, a festival, an anniversary.

• Here is a contemporary quilt that records the celebration of the American Bicentennial.

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• Amish quilts

• Amish quilts didn’t really catch on in Amish communities until the 1870s. Before then, the Amish shunned quilt making as “too modern

• Amish quilts at first were very ordinary. The first Amish-made quilts were made in one solid color. That one color was often black, brown, or blue.

• Many people assume that all Amish quilts were always made completely by hand. That is not true. While some are handmade, many were pieced together by using a treadle sewing machine.

• a community consensus has had to be reached in many instances when deciding if certain colors – like pink and white – are acceptable to use.

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Amish QuiltStar of Bethlehem

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The aids quilt is not only the largest, but is also the most affecting piece of folk art in the world. It has more than

10,000 panels (each memorializing a victim of Aids), made from taffeta, vinyl and burlap, with wedding rings, stuffed

bears, and fragments of old family quilts sewn into it.

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The Aids quilt on the Washington mall

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Quilts

From traditional to art Quilt

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•“The Quilts of Gee’s Bend” features more than sixty quilts made between 1930 and 2000 by four generations of quilt makers, resulting in a body of work that is bold, colorful, and unique.

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• The New York Times called “some of the most miraculous works of modern art America has produced,”

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The quilters lived in a isolated river-bend community--formerly part of the Pettway Plantation—A cohesive artistic tradition, shared by many generations of African American women,

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What gives the quilts of Gee’s Bend, Alabama, their particular power? One look gives you a sense of their

originality and graphic impact. The Gee’s Bend quilters inventively combine materials to form bold,

abstract compositions that reveal a genius for color and geometry. These quilts, sometimes pieced from worn clothing, were originally made for practical use,

often piled in layers on beds for warmth.

Thethe quilters lived in a isolated river-bend community--formerly part of the Pettway Plantation—A cohesive artistic tradition, shared by many generations of African American women, that lies behind each scrap

of fabric and boldly assembled pattern.

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