Anyway back to my point. For the last 4 years we have gone and yard saled our hearts out but never made it out of the state of Ohio. We always have big plans of going the whole length of the sale but since my husband is unable to pass up a yard sale we usually go at a rate of 30 miles a day. This year we were determined to make it out of Ohio. We started out of Columbus where I worked all summer and headed south making it into Kentucky before the sale started, Victory! Surprizingly there were alot of vinatge quilts that I came across during the sale this year. Traditionally the vintage quilts are not my thing. I am scared to hurt them and they are usually very fragile, often damaged, and are someones family heirloom. As a result the ones in good condition are crazy expensive and I don't blame them. If my great great grammy made a quilt and it held up all these years I would want alot of money too. This year we ran across alot of quilts. Some were only tops, some were completed quilts, most were in rough shape, some better than others, but as a general rule more than I was willing to spend. I'm out here buying dollar jeans I'm not a Rockefeller!
Somewhere late in the first day in God knows where Kentucky I came across this beauty. It's only a top that was never finished. I have no idea what the pattern is, some hybrid of a nine patch and a cathedral window (Nine cathedral windows?) The woman wasn't sure what year it was made, only that her grandmother had made it and she died in the 70's. I would guess from the fabric that it was the 20's or 30's. Other than needing a cleaning it is in amazing condition. I'm not sure what it is about it that I love, the pattern, the story, the fabrics. Not sure but I would never think of putting the colors or fabrics together if I was making a quilt. But I happily paid the 40 dollars for the quilt top and think it was a steal. And its crazy big (82"x92") and all hand pieced.
I guess what I love about it most is that it illustrated what quilting used to be about. Making something out of nothing. Piecing together old bits of dresses and shirts and making it into something useable and beautiful. I'd like to make an effort to embrace that mentality and do more with what I have. Maybe that's what I should call this quilt....My old Kentucky inspiration. So that was a very long winded way to get to this quilt I have been working on with the idea of making more out of less.
Love making these stars and love the scrappiness of it. Linking it up to WIP Wednesday at Freshly Pieced
Don't forget about the give away here until 8/25!
SO glad you snatched up that top. Such history. I like your scrappy stars. I imagine the scrap pile hasn't changed?
ReplyDeleteScrappy has always been cool in my book!
ReplyDeleteI LOVE that old top! GREAT find!!! I would take that cream border off! it's beautiful all by itself!
ReplyDeleteI'm with you all the way on scrappy!
ReplyDeleteJust stunning.Love all that top!
ReplyDeleteNice find! I believe that's called a Glorified Nine Patch, a basic nine patch with the orange peels added. But I like your scrappy stars even better, they're so bright and cheery!
ReplyDeleteIf it wasn't for the nine-patches I would say this is a Robbing Peter to Pay Paul Pattern. Anyway, it is cheery and fun. I love your stars too.
ReplyDelete