Friday, July 29, 2022

The Wicked Quilt Top: Yellow Brick Road in Black-White-Gray and Granny Apple Smith Green

 

The Wicked Quilt Top

This was a kit I found in my mom's stash.  I've never made a Yellow Brick Road Quilt, but I know she made several of them.  She had the fat quarters already cut into strips.  It did not take long to sew them into blocks, and then into the top.  This weekend, I added the borders.

Matching the stripes on the pieced border.

The striped fabric needed to be pieced to make the borders longer than the width of the fabric.  I wasn't quite sure how it would go ...  I folded and pressed 1 side of the strip as I would for making binding strips.  Then I matched the silver stripes on the front side and pinned it in place so I could sew the seam and keep those stripes pretty well matched.  It worked!   All 6 seams came out very close to perfect!  Or close enough!


Here's another photo outside, backlit by the sun.  Looks like stained class, except for the dark figure (my son) behind it!

Saturday, July 23, 2022

Vintage Woven Woolen Coverlet in Colonial Whig Rose Pattern

Blue Whig Rose Woven Coverlet (Blue side)

I bought this gorgeous whig rose wool coverlet on FB Marketplace from a woman in Pennsylvania.  She bought it at an antique store in Baltimore a while back.  She had it in a local rummage sale this summer.  It's absolutely gorgeous! Made of a soft wool in excellent condition.  She could not tell me much more about it, though.

Here's the white side on the reverse.

Not sure of it's provenance.  Is it antique or a more recent reproduction?  It's in too good of shape to be antique (no stains, rips or tears), and no seam * where panels were sewn together.  It was woven in 1 big piece at 100 x 146 inches which makes me think it's manufactured, and not a home weaver.  No label as from a commercial maker though.

 

This is less than a quarter of it hanging folded over the couch. 

Detail shot of the borders.

I am learning as I collect ...  Woven coverlets were typically made in the home.  A home weaver typically made only 1 or 2 in her lifetime, after spinning the fibers herself.  Materials were cotton or linen for warp, and wool for the pattern weft. Cotton for the stabilizing weft.  Often they would grow the cotton and raise the sheep, process the fiber and spin it into usable yarn so they could weave.

After doing some additional research, my bet is that this is a reproduction factory made coverlet made by The Goodwin Guild (or their their forefathers) in North Carolina.  They specialized in reproducing old coverlet patterns from colonial times.  The mill worked from 1952 through the 1990s out of Blowing Rock, North Carolina.  Although the Goodwins were in the weaving business much longer than that ...  The Clinch Valley Blanket Mills ran from 1890 - 1950.  They also ran mills in Virginia, West Virginia and Tennessee.  

If it's from before 1952, it could be one of the Clinch Valley coverlets, near Tazewell. So it could have been woven there rather than in Blowing Rock?  Apparently, Tom Kniesley is supposed to be the historian on coverlets from that time and place.  Or it could have been woven by some nameless weaver at home on her own very wide loom, using the same old patterns ... 

My specimen is one big piece of woven fabric. It was not panels sewn together, as I would expect if it were made by a weaver at home.   Only a factory would have looms large enough to weave a piece this big.  Although whig rose is one pattern that a home weaver could have done herself, this may have been more mechanized with a jacquard loom in a factory setting.  I still love it!


Image from here.  Goodwin Weavers: Unidentified weaver weaving fabric for "Goodwin Guild" family owned weaving company from Blowing Rock, NC. 1974.

You can see multiple coverlets with the whig rose pattern in different colors piled up behind her.

It looks like this lady is doing the finishing work of weaving, hand-stitching the hems at the edges.  It looks like mine has one of these signature hems, too:

 

Detail shot of the hand-sewn hem at the edges. 




Weaving Drafts Goodwin Guild, Blowing Rock, North Carolina - Library of Congress

Take a look at these old drafts that The Goodwin Guild worked from.  [Follow the link above ...  There are 36 more pictures in the series!] I would not even know how to read these transcriptions.  Very different from what we see today.

 

Charles Goodwin and Sons Weavers and Entrepreneurs - Back Country Makers:

The Goodwins were interested in innovative practices. In the 1890s, they installed new water-powered looms, and during the first decade of the new century discovered a way to eliminate the need for piecing together narrow lengths of woven coverlet fabric. Their seamless coverlets distinguished the Goodwin product from all those that had been made on home looms throughout the mountains of Southwest Virginia and Northeast Tennessee with the signature center seam(s). 

The mill's specialty was old-fashioned wool coverlets that the Goodwin advertisements called "colonial style" with names like Rings and Flowers, Lover's Knot, Olive Leaf, Morning Star and Whig Rose.

Today, families across Southwest Virginia still have Clinch Valley Blanket Mill coverlets folded away on closet shelves or carefully stored in blanket chests.

 

I also found a fascinating article about the Goodwins, their woolen mill empire, and how these goods were marketed:

Wilson, Kathleen Curtis. “Fabric and Fiction: The Clinch Valley Blanket Mills, 1890-1950.” Journal of the Appalachian Studies Association, vol. 7, 1995, pp. 50–56. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/41445679. Accessed 23 Jul. 2022.  

Here are some juicy quotes:
Mechanization increased production in the weaving industry at the turn of the century.  Goodwin used local labor and materials to weave on looms powered by water, steam, and electricity.  Over the years, the mill employed from 30 to 120 workers to weave colonial reproduction coverlets and blankets, using factory spun cotton, commercial dyes, and huge quantities of wool processed in-house. (p.51)
 
When prices were low, farmers traded all their wool for coverlets and blankets to furnish bedding to the extended family or to put away for the next generation.  Even in good times, many families used a little wool in trade.  The woven goods were not only functional and warm, but beautiful as well.  Without the 'trade,' most families could not have afforded such luxurious items.  The mill-woven items became prized wedding gifts and baby presents, and were especially desirable since the giver usually had some association with the weaver or worker involved in it's production.  These coverlets and blankets still remain in families as treasured keepsakes passed from generation to generation. (p.51)
 
[They supplied thousands of wool blankets for the military during the first and second world wars.] In peace time, the mill wove colonial coverlets, lap robes for horse drawn buggies and automobiles, table linens, and baby blankets.  CE and John Goodwin went into the community to borrow handwoven coverlets and pattern drafts to copy.  According to their advertising, Goodwin produced the first seamless coverlets, appealing to northern buyers who didn't like that 'unsightly' seam down the middle.  The end result was a product of quality and durability. (p.52)
 
To sell these household goods, Goodwin avoided revealing his factory production capacity and focused on selling a concept of tradition. While using modern equipment of the day, Goodwin marketed the nostalgic idea of old women spinning and weaving in remote mountain cabins.  He put together 'the story' of his sil weaving background in England, simple mountain people, and faithful adherence to the handwoven coverlets of a bygone era. (p.52)
 
The Clinch Valley Blanket Mills' vast production capacity, coupled with it's quality and authentic 19th century designs, allowed the company to sell thousands of coverlets and blankets to customers who thought they were buying handwoven items. (p.54) 
 
So there's confirmation that it's not considered handwoven at home by a colonial lady )I never really thought it was ...), but it's a lovely example of the whig rose pattern and a lovely woolen coverlet just the same!
 
Here are some other examples of Goodwin woven coverlets:

Antique Jacquard Coverlet Indigo Blue and White Bedcover 100"x 78" on ebay

 

VTG The Goodwin Guild Woven Wool Blue & White Coverlet WHIG ROSE 106x75 QUEEN 

This is one of the more informative descriptions online:

WHIG ROSE Pattern in Navy Blue & White Woven Wool. Reversible design (there are narrow hand-whipstitched hems at top and bottom). 
 
Beautifully woven wool fabric - excellent quality - almost feels like cotton!! Drapes beautifully and resists wrinkling. Has a somewhat light springy characteristic to it! Entire blanket weighs less than 4 lbs!! 
No scratchiness, heaviness or irritation associated with typical wool blankets. Truly a beautiful excellent quality blanket!  

Excellent Condition!! Came from an estate in Southeast Michigan. The children stated they thought it may have never been / or very lightly used. They thought their parents may have received it as a gift, or purchased when traveling years earlier, and put it into storage, as they don't recall ever seeing it used, despite someone being there almost daily. No holes, tears, wear, repairs, stains, odors or other defects noted!! From clean non-smoking estate!

NOTE: if you aren't familiar w/ The Goodwin Guild Woven coverlets, I highly suggest doing an online search on their remarkable history! Many of their coverlets are in museums today!
SMALL ONLINE EXCERPT:  The Goodwin Guild was established in Blowing Rock, NC in the early 1950s after leaving Cedar Bluff, VA. As the coverlet has a Goodwin Guild tag, it could date from as early as that move to North Carolina. The Goodwin coverlets were made with traditional pattern drafts that had been gathered from home weavers in the region, including the Lover’s Knot with Pine Tree Border, Olive Leaf, Rings and Flowers, and Whig Rose.

 
Vintage Goodwin Guild NC Mountains Hand Woven Coverlet in the rare light blue colors - 76 x 106on ebay

 

Vintage Goodwin Guild Woven Bedspread Blue and White Coverlet 91"x110"

 

Vintage coverlet woven by The Goodwin Guild pink ivory on ebay

Just to show they used a variety of colors.

Mike Harman - Weaver - Ashe County - Blue Ridge National Heritage Area

 
 
 
 Here it is in the Davison book -- Version II on the lower half of the page.

 
Me in my "home office" researching and writing this post with the new coverlet at my back.

Heaven!

Saturday, July 09, 2022

Faux Ikat Scarf in Delphinium Blue is Complete

  

Faux Ikat Scarf in Delphinium Blue made in Zephyr Merino and Silk, hand-dyed with Wilton's Delphinium Blue.

Remember the epic weaving project from a few months ago?  The weaving part has been done for a few weeks already.  I finally cut it off the loom and did the finishing work on it -- sewing in the loose ends / broken / repaired strings, finishing the ends ... wet finishing.

 

Here it is fresh off the loom, with the measuring tape ribbons still attached.

I wove 72 inches on the loom, plus a little extra to keep as a sample at the end -- until I ran out of weft.

Instead of fringe, I added a satin binding.  I zigzagged the woven edges, and cut the fringe down to about 1 inch, then encased it in the satin binding.  It's a little stiff now, but as I rub my fingers on it, it will wear down and get soft (like when I was a kid).


 

Once the binding was managed, and a few broken/repair ends woven in, it was ready for wet finishing.

Simply let it sit in a bucket of room temp. water for an hour or so, then wring it out and pull off more water with a towel, and let it dry.

This was another reason for keeping the sample piece.  This way, I can really tell was a difference the wet finishing makes.  The finished scarf is "plumped up" and much softer.  While the sample piece is much more inhibited, shall we say? 

 

I absolutely LOVE how this turned out!  Especially the "broken" delphinium blue dyed warp.  And how the weave pattern shows through the dyed and un-dyed sections.

I even had enough left (after the planned 72 inches) to do a small sample that I can keep with the pattern and notes.  I can also compare how it looks compared to after the wet-finishing.


I think this photo was taken BEFORE wet finishing.  You can see it's a little more tightly bound here, not so fluffy as the photo above.  


Here are the other posts about this project:

Epic Spring Weaving Project Begins -- The Faux Ikat Scarf in Delphinium Blue (March 19)

Weaving Again: Pretty Warp for Faux Ikat Scarf (April 3)

Emerging ... on the Loom (April 9)

Sunday, July 03, 2022

Vintage Quilts: 1960s Cathedral Windows

Collectible Cathedral Windows Quilt

I got this one on ebay as well.  It was listed as a table cloth -- though, I would never want to use this on the table!  I'm going to hang it on the wall ...  It's 30 x 40 inches, so not big enough for a bed.  It just makes me happy to look at it!

Unlike the vintage Wedding Ring Quilt I purchased this week, I believe this one really is from the 1960s, and it is old enough to be called antique.  The fabrics are thick and sturdy -- similar to a quilt that my Aunt made from about that time.


No batting, as is traditional for this type of quilt.  The background fabric gets folded and layered multiple times, adding to the weight of these quilts.  Look at all those fine little stitches!

The stitching is very well done -- Much better than I do with hand-stitching!


It does not have a label, but I see a couple  of these horse patches that say, "Remember me when you see this."  Who was this nameless woman?

Here's another detail shot of some of the individual patches.


 My Own Cathedral Windows Quiltlet

Several years ago, I worked up a mini-Cathedral Windows Quiltet.  It was the handwork I would take along to France for several trips.  I tried to work up 1 window each day on those trips.  My handwork has never been great, although it did improve with that project.  All the colored squares were scraps, leftover from other projects -- If I think about it, I can even tell you all the other projects those particular fabrics appeared in.  ;-)   The point is: I know what it takes to make something like this, and I have tremendous respect for the maker, and I'm willing to pay $112 to own this larger example at the top of this post.

Yes, I'm officially a collector now!

Saturday, July 02, 2022

Vintage Reproduction Quilt: 1990s Double Wedding Ring

Vintage 1990s Reproduction Wedding Ring Quilt

My friend Laura Ramseier "Aired Her Quilts" this wkd, which means she put on her own quilt show at her house and garden.  It included 2 bed turnings.  She's been quilting for so long now, and her mother was a quilter, too, that she has lots to show and share -- in addition to the antique and vintage quilts she and her friend Pat Saft collect.  

Seeing all those quilts is always inspiring, and it made me realize that I could start collecting quilts in some of those classic patterns that I may never get around to making my self ...  and so I was browsing on ebay this wkd and found a few vintage quilts that seemed reasonably priced in particular patterns.

This one is a Double Wedding Ring Quilt, The eBay listing said it was from the 1930s, but I suspect it's more like 1990s instead.  It's hand-quilted (something else I'm not likely to do myself, so if I want one, I have to buy it).  I really liked that striped fabric in the rings, and the reds.  It made me think of my mom and Christmas.  It makes me happy!

A few years ago, I volunteered to finish a double wedding ring quiltlet that my Aunt Rosita was making for her grand-daughter's wedding, but she died before she could finish it.  She already had the pieces cut out and many of the blocks constructed.  All I had to do was put it together and finish it.  It wasn't so bad, really -- I'm glad I did it, but I do not relish the thought of cutting out all those pieces to make one of my own -- even though I got her GoCut die cut machine to make it easier.  

The Spruce offers instructions for cleaning and caring for vintage quilts

Simple Simon & Company explain how to wash a vintage quilt.

Lesson Learned: Here's why I think it's NOT 1930s, but much younger ... so buyer beware out there in the collectible quilt market.  Listings may not be accurate.  I should have guessed by the price!

When it arrived, it was clean, but well-used (loved?).  The fabrics felt thin and flimsy, not like the older sturdier antique fabrics I'm familiar with.  They did not seem to be worn in the way that certain dyes eat away at fabrics.  There were several places with rips and tears where you could peer inside and see the batting, which looked more like polyester than wool or cotton to me. So I did a burn test ... 


Yes, it looks like polyester due to the black bead / melting action.

Then I googled to find out when polyester batts came into use, knowing that a true 1930's quilt would have used a flannel sheet, wool, or cotton, which needs to be quilted closer together than this one was.  Turns out, they started using polyester batts in the 1950s ("Better living though chemistry ...") when the plastics industry started to take off.

It's hand quilted, but the stitches are much farther apart than I would have expected for a 1930s quilt. Again, the polyester batt would have allowed for wider spaces between quilting motifs.  Someone did the hand-stitching, and I'm grateful for that!

Here's a good reference page to help discern if a quilt is older or newer:

Real or Repro: Separating Traditional from Imported Quilts

Don't get me wrong: I still like this quilt--That's why I purchased it, but knowing that it's not an authentic 1930s wedding ring quilt made with better quality or even period fabrics, I may just repair the rips and tears in a more practical way (on the machine), rather than hand-stitching everything shut.  

Chalk it up to a Lesson Learned. 

I DO love this pattern!

Friday, July 01, 2022

Little Things Part 1: Warm and Cozy


I made a little tea cozy for my brand new French press, aka The Bodum.  Ever since Susan Hollingsworth had one at Summit Coop 25+ years ago, I've wanted one.  I finally found a cheap imitation at StV a few month's ago, but alas, it cracked with a little hot water.  [Yikes!]  So DH got me a real one.  2-1/2 cups, suitable for a coupla empty nesters like us! 

He jokingly said it needed a little tea cozy, so I took him up on the challenge and made one ...


This is fabric that I quilted a while back when I was making bags.  This was a lovely woven fabric salvaged from a skirt.  Unfortunately, I realized too late that I had cut the piece out backwards -- mirror image to what I really needed.  Oh well!  It actually worked remarkably well for this project.

I backed it with a piece of flannel, and then played with it (folding over the top edge to make a collar -- like a robe -- and adding the button and hair tie for the closure.


YES -- We use it for tea, not coffee. That's just the way we roll ...  ;-) 


"Perfect for my little Bodum!"

Palpatine's Journey by Worthikids