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Ten Antique Quilts

Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby loise98 » Thu Jun 07, 2012 6:07 am

Margo, Not only is it marvelously wonderful to see these charming family treasures, but it is also good to know what you have been up to. Thanks so much for sharing these lovely heirlooms. What a very special job to be entrusted to you. You must have been pleased to have been asked.
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby LoriReid » Thu Jun 07, 2012 6:28 am

Family "TREASURES". says it all. Thank you for sharing the wonderful pictures so we all can enjoy seeing the work of years past. I agree that you are definitely the right one to have been entrusted to finish these beautiful pieces.
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby SpiritsFold » Thu Jun 07, 2012 7:22 am

My goodness what a find! Love how you are preparing them for their second life in a new century. You seem to know intuitively what is right for each quilt. How lucky they are to have been entrusted to your care!
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby rehak » Thu Jun 07, 2012 7:28 am

Margo - Thanks for sharing! What wonderful quilts and quilting!! I think you win the award for fabric bleeding....

Nancy
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby Margo » Thu Jun 07, 2012 7:38 am

rehak wrote:Margo - Thanks for sharing! What wonderful quilts and quilting!! I think you win the award for fabric bleeding....

Nancy



Thanks for the kudos, ladies.

Nancy, I was really surprised that there was no bleeding onto the other fabrics when I washed and blocked those two quilts! I used 3 color catchers in the washer and there wasn't even much color change on them!
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby heartnsoulquilts » Thu Jun 07, 2012 7:47 am

What an honor to quilt these so they can finally be loved and used (or displayed) by the family. Every quilt tells a story and you have helped them to tell it!
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby rehak » Thu Jun 07, 2012 7:54 am

Margo wrote:
rehak wrote:Margo - Thanks for sharing! What wonderful quilts and quilting!! I think you win the award for fabric bleeding....

Nancy



Thanks for the kudos, ladies.

Nancy, I was really surprised that there was no bleeding onto the other fabrics when I washed and blocked those two quilts! I used 3 color catchers in the washer and there wasn't even much color change on them!


That is really amazing!! Fabric bleeding is really interesting to me. (I'm a geek, I know!) It's not just which fabrics will bleed, but also which fabrics will pick up the excess dyes. (Although this is the first time I've seen someone's hand pick up the excess dyes!!) And. of course, water chemistry makes a difference, too. A friend of mine has noticed that in the past year or so she has started having a lot of trouble with bleeding fabrics that she didn't have in the past. She originally attributed it to changes in fabric manufacturing until I pointed out that the others in our little quilting group haven't had the same problems. So now we're thinking that it probably has to do with the chemicals that are getting into her water from the nearby fracking. Scary!! I'm pushing her to get her water checked...
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby 2dogs » Thu Jun 07, 2012 8:17 am

Marvelous Margo,
It's a copy on all the comments, your expert skills and knowledge will bring these special quilts to a new beginning.
Thanks so much for sharing!

Good point about the fracking, Lots of that happening in MT.

Terry
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby Scoopie » Thu Jun 07, 2012 9:48 am

Margo, these quilts are priceless! And, now I know what you've been working on lately! What wonderful treasures these will be now that you have firmly secured them, and given them a new life. Also, I am amazed at the amount of hand stitching! Such dedication. And, I'm assuming there are so many plaids, because they are from worn out men's shirts? (Some recycling going on here?)

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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby PosyP » Thu Jun 07, 2012 9:50 am

Margo, those quilts are a wonderful inspiration. I like the first log cabin, you show, because the block turned 'wrong'(?) makes the pattern turn into a spiral. But they are all great. :)
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby bbquiltmaker » Thu Jun 07, 2012 10:47 am

Thanks so much for sharing these, Margo!! And I agree completely with Pam Day--you are the perfect person to add the finishing love to these "family treasures"!
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby lorra » Thu Jun 07, 2012 11:44 am

Margo, thank you for giving us the quilt show. They are beautiful, and the time and resourcefulness involved is wonderful. Thank you for treating them with the care they deserve.
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby Margo » Thu Jun 07, 2012 12:17 pm

OK....the large red log cabin is on the frame. All of these quilts have had "issues", but this one has more fluffyness than the rest to try to ease in.

I have sprayed the entire pass with starch and hope that when it dries it will have sucked out some of the fullness!

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Did I mention that measuring was not high on the quiltmaker's agenda either? :roll:
Where she took large tucks to make things fit, I'm left with some "D" cups!
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby ajclapp » Thu Jun 07, 2012 12:37 pm

Margo, thanks for sharing all of these wonderful quilts. I'm glad it's you and not me doing the quilting. I would definitely have a hard time dealing with that fullness. I remember color on my hands once, probably back when I was working mostly with plaids.
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Re: Ten Antique Quilts

Postby bbquiltmaker » Thu Jun 07, 2012 12:44 pm

Even with their "issues", we still love them for their personality and the link to the makers, now gone. As I tell all my beginning quilt students: "There's nothing wrong with your quilt that 100 years won't solve!"
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