Site icon Southern Charm Quilts

The Rescue Quilts – #9 – The One with the Quilt Inside

The goal is to honor the quilt maker who made the quilt top by completing their project, to not waste good craftsmanship (usually done by hand), to ogle long ago yummy fabrics, and to breathe in a little old inspiration and make it new again.  You can view all parts of this series here.

Want to get started on finishing your own Rescue quilts?  Here are a few articles to get you started:


 

 

So this quilt.  I talked about it on Instagram a few weeks ago.  So much has been happening that I haven’t had the time to give it a proper post here, but today I will.

My husband and I went to an estate sale across the river (a very crowded estate sale) a few weeks ago.  I love estate sales and I also don’t love them.  I like them, because you never know what you may find.  There are treasures in them!  But most of the time I always find myself thinking and feeling like a vulcher digging through someone’s life and thinking that if anyone ever did this at my grandmother’s house I would be upset.

This of course is the wrong way to think about them.  I said something about this a while ago and a kind woman answered me and told me that they held an estate sale of her loved one’s things.  She said that they took what they wanted, but the amount of things left behind was overwhelming and she liked the thought of them going to the home of someone who wanted and would use them.

I’m working on getting rid of the icky feeling I get when entering the houses.

On this particular estate sale I purchased three quilts.  Today, I’ll be talking about one of them.

 


Product Spotlight

Whispers Low Volume Fabric Bundle

Get your bundle here.

 

 

This quilt is scrappy and random and full of the sweetest fabric prints.  No real pattern, anything goes, but the maker alternated pieced blocks with whole blocks.  I like to think she was using up some of her stash in this one.

Some of the blocks look like double pieced snowballs pointed at each other creating that butterfly shape I so love.  Other blocks are just 4-patches.

 


The Next Quilt Along starts this September!

Sign Up


 

 

This one was hand quilted with organic diagonal lines running throughout the quilt.  It took sometime, I’m sure.  More time was probably spent on the quilting than the piecing I would think.  Her stitches are natural and loving.  I keep picturing her sitting on a front porch, needle moving in and out while gazing up at the sounds of birds now and then.  She would have drug the quilt all over her place during the weeks or months it might have taken her to finish it.

It’s a heavier quilt, so her arms would have been sore and tired.  She’d have been ready to be done with it, but still pleased with herself for finishing it and using up those fabric scraps.

 

 

The binding was done with machine.  This fact makes me think this quilt might have been made in the seventies.  It’s not as delicate as the rest of the quilt, done quickly to just get it finished, maybe.  It’s stitches are crooked and half hazard.

It makes me think that maybe someone else finished it for her or maybe I had it right to begin with.  She was tired of this quilt.  Enough of the sore arms!

I’ve so enjoyed admiring her work, wondering her thoughts, touching the quilt where she touched it too.

 


Patchwork + Quilt (a class for learning to quilt)

Take the Class


 

 

There’s one thing I haven’t told you about this quilt.  Something I found to be endlessly fascinating.  Something that really showed me just how frugal this quilt maker was.  I’m getting there.

As I’ve said the quilt was painfully heavy.  You know the kind.  The old fashioned batting that weighed more than a small baby.  The good stuff.  The kind you can’t purchase anymore.  Please don’t tell me that it’s cotton.  I use cotton today, it’s not just cotton.  My quilts never weighed so much or lay as thick.  It’s more than cotton.  It’s that high quality kind of product that no longer exists.  Batting companies do not make this kind of batting anymore.  We’d have to lay batting on top of batting and maybe do it again for it to be the same.

So anyway, back to the fascinating part.  I bought the quilt at the estate sale, gently washed it up, made it smell yummy, closed and sewed up a few small places on it.  Another quilter purchased it from me.   It went to a loving home.  She emailed me sometime after she received it and asked me if I knew.  “Know what?”  She went on and told me that when she received the quilt she washed it again and doing so a few more seams busted open (it happens with old quilts).  She went to sew them up herself and took a peek inside.  Guess what was inside?  A whole other quilt!

This quilter had taken an old tattered quilt and used it as the batting for her new quilt.  I’d never known that this was a thing, but after mentioning it on Instagram, I know several of you knew about this too.

I’m bummed I didn’t find the other quilt inside myself or get pictures.  Still though, this whole experience has been positive.  I’ll let you know about the two other quilts I purchased soon.

 


Product Spotlight

The Down to Earth Bundle

Get your bundle here.

 

 

0
Exit mobile version