Monday, November 9, 2020

Monday Humor

 It's a busy time for me right now because my husband is having surgery next week.  We are out most everyday getting tests and the like done for him.  I thought it would be fun to share a cartoon that was featured in The Old Home Town in 1931.  It exemplifies how important quilting had become during the depression.  It also illustrates how women would love to have this pattern or that.  I often wondered if Stanley (the cartoonist) was a quilter or married to a quilter.  

Have a safe and happy day!  Tomorrow I'll be featuring my first "Bloom Where You're Planted" quilt!



Sunday, November 8, 2020

Suffrage Centennial: Our First Woman Vice President


Fireworks lit up the skies in London. 
Church bells were rung in France.
Our Canadian neighbors rang bells and yelled with delight.
The jubilation was expressed throughout the world.  
"The win," one person tweeted, "is not just for America but for the world."
In the U.S. A., people took to dancing in the streets.

Congratulations to President-Elect Joe Biden and Vice President-Elect Kamala Harris.  

Kamala Harris is the perfect ending to our year-long celebration of the 19th Amendment and women's right to vote!!!


Have a safe and happy day!

Friday, November 6, 2020

Flower Friday: November 6, 2020

 It's Flower Friday and we share photos of flowers, floral textiles, and images.  

Scout likes Denise's  (our neighbor) new mums!

I love this quote:

Libby sent some lovely photos in that vein:



Libby said the bird is a pileated woodpecker!  Thanks Libby!
Have a safe and happy day!



Thursday, November 5, 2020

Map/States of the Union Quilts

Libby's Suffrage Quilt featured the state of Tennessee!

Election week means lots of maps--maps of the country and maps of the states as counties report results.  I have always liked maps.  Once in a while, I see a vintage map quilt up for sale.  I'm always tempted to buy it!  Here is a photo of part of one that sold on Etsy a while back.  I think it was made in the 1960s or 1970s:

More commonly found are state blocks.  These blocks commonly feature the birds or flowers of the state and are usually embroidered.  Yesterday, I posted a block of an unfinished Pennsylvania block that featured flowers.  Some blocks even feature both:

There's actually been scholarhip on all the birds/flowers of states done by Rose Marie Werner who also has a subscription website that features Kit Quilts.  Appraisers and collectors find this website insightful about all kinds of kit quilts.

Last night our friend Jessica sent this hilarious link to me about what the election results might look like if quilters made the electoral maps for tv.  The Onion is a satire website so please don't take this as fact.  But it is a fun story.  You can read it here.

Enjoy!

Yesterday Sue P. emailed me that Patchwork Polly vintage paper dolls are available on ebay!  They are cute and fun if you want to peruse ebay for them!

  Tomorrow is Flower Friday and if you have any flowers left in your garden and want to share photos (or other floral imges), you can email me at allentownquilter@gmail.com.

Have a safe and happy day!













Wednesday, November 4, 2020

Polly Patchwork and Calico Bushes

 


And now for something completely different...I could use a diversion from politics and I'm betting you could too!

I had a blurb in my files on a 1928 book called Polly Patchwork.  I wanted to know what the book was about and wondered if I could read it online via Googlebooks.  I didn't find it but I found another book called The History of Polly Patchwork--the second edition which was published in 1815 in London.  

The History of Polly Patchwork is a Cinderella type story of a poor girl who has cruel sisters but makes her way in the world and becomes a servant to a wealthy family.  Eventually she marries a hard working man and as he prospers, Polly is named a Dame and has 6 children.

Then another book came to my attention as I researched.  It was a children's book of poetry called The Jingle Book.  Written by Carolyn Wells, it was published in 1906.  As it turns out Polly Patchwork is actually a character in a poem called "A Day Dream"--here it is:

But what about the original Polly Patchwork I found?

Well I couldn't read it online but the book appears to be about a girl named Polly who's Grandmother makes her a special patchwork dress for a spelling competition.  Here is Polly in her lovely dress:

The author of the book was Rachel Fields and I just knew I had heard of her somewhere.  Turns out, Rachel Fields wrote one of my all time favorite poems which was used in a lovely song--Something told the Wild Geese.  If you don't know the song, my favorite rendition of this is by the Van Trapp children (second or third generation from the original kids).  You can listen to it hear.  It is the song I like to listen to this particular time of year.

But of course, I couldn't just leave it there.  I was curious about Fields work and stumbled upon a play called The Patchwork Quilt.  Then I found the title of her children's book called Calico Bush.  This particular book made me wonder if she was a quilter and what the heck is this book about (what can I tell you, this is how my mind works).  I can tell you that Calico Bush was a Newbery Medal Honor book.


The story is set in Maine in the 1700s and features a young french indentured servant girl.  I haven't read the book.  But what the heck is the calico bush in Calico Bush?  And was Rachel Fields a quilter?  It turns out that someone else was curious about her too and an academic article was published about her work in 1996.  I don't have the article but you can read the synopsis here.  And somehow the quilt pattern, Delectable Mountains, figures in the book Calico Bush.
Weirdly, I've been planning to use this pattern in an upcoming quilt.

And just because I love to escape into anything unrelated to current events, I wondered (still) about calico bushes.  Turn out that calico bush is a common name for Mountain Laurel.

Mountain Laurel is the official flower of the state of Pennsylvania, unfortunately for me...
because ballot counting in Pennsylvania was the one thing I was trying to escape on this particular journey this morning.  

What can I tell you, it's Murphy's Law.

I hope you have a good day and wish you all the best!  
Stay safe!















Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Election Day: November 3, 2020


Thank you Kathie!
Kathie L. made this wonderful piece and allowed me to share it.  She said the pattern comes from bonjourquilt.com.

Beth and I have spent the better part of the last 5 years studying and celebrating the women's suffrage movement in the United States.  We would be remiss if we didn't post on Election Day-- especially this election--unquestionably the most imporant of our lifetime.  
1929 bluework quilt.  The stakes in this election are even higher  than the election of 1932 when Herbert Hoover was defeated by Franklin Roosevelt and the New Deal was established.  


All the pundits are talking about the role of women in this election.  But the truth is that since 1984, according to the Pew Research Center, the proportion of women voters exceeds men voters (see here). 1984 is the year that we had our first woman as a running mate, Geraldine Ferraro.

Women are coming out in droves this election as well.  If I had to summarize what I'm hearing from women, I'd have to say that "women are mad as hell and not going to take it anymore".  Like our courageous suffragists, women are again concerned about children, healthcare, and the upholding of the Constitution.

George Washington redwork from my "Merry Christmas 1904" quilt

The first cross stitch piece I ever made in the 1980s.

During this election, according to data published on the blog The 19th, women have doubled their numbers in voting (see here).
Also from th Merry Christmas 1904 quilt.

In the back of my closet, I keep a special dress.  I don't sew garments and I certainly don't collect them but when I saw this dress, I had to have it.
I would guess it is from the late 1960s/early 1970s because of what the print records, including the presidential nominees of Nixon/Agnew:

The fabric summarizes many political campaigns--






Unity under Ike.

And one impeachment:

One last thing today.  I've been appalled by a lot of things these past four years.  But yesterday the suggestion was made by one of the candidates that votes shouldn't be counted after Election Day.  In my lifetime, 6 different elections did not have the results in by the end of the day (1960, 1968, 1976, 2000, 2004, 2016).  Our brave men and women in the armed forces can vote up until a week after the election (in my state of Pennsylvania at least).

Let us be reminded of one of the brave rallying cries of our suffragists:

Stay strong, safe, and keep busy today.

The best phrase on the political dress.
 













Monday, November 2, 2020

Panel Question

Suebee asked last week for suggestions about a panel she had purchased.  She was looking for ideas on what to do with it.  Here is her panel:


Kathie responded right away and said she had just seen this idea on Facebook the day before:

Additionally, Robert Kaufman (the manufacturer of the fabric) has a free pattern here.

I hope this gives you some ideas Sue!

Most manufacturers provide free patterns on their website so you can always check their websites for ideas for your fabric!

Today is a rough day with a lot of anxiety for me so today's and Tuesday's post will be brief.  Tomorrow I'll post some patriotic things in honor of the official day of voting.

In the meantime I'm offf to do some washing and cleaning and sewing!  Stay safe and have a good day!