Login Email or Screen Name:
Password:
Can't Login?
The Quilt Show on Twitter
The Quilt Show on Facebook
Daily BlogWatch ShowsAlex & RickyBOMClassroomsThe ForumContestsFeaturesProjectsQuilt GalleryShoppeHelpMy Account
Search the SiteMember BlogsArticlesNewslettersQuilt Market ReportsPressEventsRSSMember StoriesWorld VideosQuilting Pioneers
Bernina Educational Videos




Site Sponsors:
 
 
TQS Articles Pam Holland Videos


May 16, 2012 02:48 pm
 
Only Articles with Video
 
Florence Peto (1881-1970)
January 26, 2009
Posted in Quilting Pioneers  |   3 Comments  |   Submit a Comment

21_calico_garden.jpg
"Calico Garden Crib Quilt" (49" x 39") by Florence Peto,1950
Pieced appliqued and quilted cotton. 

Shelburne Museum permanent collection.

Photo courtesy Shelburne Museum. 

 

Today it's hard to realize how little quilt history was available before the influence of our early 20th century pioneer quilt historians. Florence Peto is one of the most influential figures active before 1960. Peto wasn't alone in her pursuit of quilt history at that time. Marie Webster preceded her and Carrie Hall, Rose Kretsinger, Dr. William Dunton, Ruth Finley, and Berthe Stenge, just to name a few other TQHF Honorees were each busy in her/his own sphere Each would eventually come in contact with Peto. Yet, Peto remains a unique voice in the quilt world from the 1930s-60s.

Taught by her New York Dutch grandmother to be a fine needlewoman at an early age, Florence Peto had a life-long interest in antique textiles in particular. Born in 1881 and married in 1900, her personal interest in textile research took on an added dimension as a result of her husband's position as a cotton converter and mill owner. Her access to his fabric sample books stirred her interest in dyes and printing methods, wetting her appetite for ever more knowledge. Her self-directed studies eventually led her to focus on quilts and for that the quilt world can be very grateful.

 

21_florence_peto_charm_blocks.jpg
Photo by Karen Alexander

 

 

However, Peto didn't stop at just studying the fabric and pattern of the quilt. She went in search of the quilt's story. This is where the contacts she made through her lecturing often paid off. Peto believed that quilts were "cloth documents," and she wanted to know who, where, why and when about each quilt. Once she found a quilt, she interviewed family members and, when possible, sifted through archives, files, letters and even diaries to get the quilt maker's story. So great was her passion for these stories, her first book "Historic Quilts" (1939) focused on quilts for which she had personally gathered documentation.

 

21_florence_peto_books.jpg
Photo by Karen Alexander

 

Eventually becoming an excellent quilt maker herself and winning several contests, Peto's "Calico Garden" was selected in 1999 for inclusion in "The 20th Century's 100 Best American Quilts". Peto also wrote about quilts for the popular publications of the time — Antiques, American Home, Americana, Woman's Day, Hobbies and McCall's, lectured widely, designed needlework kits and greatly influenced the quilt collecting of several museums. One of those museums, The Shelburne Museum,is holding an exhibit in honor of Peto, May 17-Oct 25, 2009. Rarely seen quilts will be on exhibit for the first time in decades. Don't miss the opportunity!

 

21_peto_quilt.jpg
"Where Liberty Dwells" 1953 by Florence Peto.  Private collection.

Photo courtesy Shelburne Museum.

 

Contemporary readers of the earliest quilt history books (such as Webster, Finley and Peto) will note that today's modern quilt historians have corrected some of the misnomers of these early historians.  This in no way disparages their earlier work.  We simply correct it and build upon it as new information is uncovered and new understanding develops.

 

 

This brief article is but a thumbnail sketch of a very talented productive woman.  Surely Peto's life story presented in a full-length book with lots of photos is long overdue.  Seldom seen Peto quilts will be on exhibit for the first time in decades this summer at The Shelburne Museum in Vermont.  It's an especially rare opportunity to see those quilts loaned by the family!

 

Karen Alexander,

Member of AQSG since 1981

Past President, The Quilters Hall of Fame

January 19, 2009

Want to know more? Publications of both the American Quilt Study Group and The Quilters Hall of Fame offer more history on Florence Peto. This brief article is but a thumbnail sketch of a very talented productive woman. Surely Peto's life story presented in a full-length book with lots of photos is long overdue.

 

 

Avery, Virginia. "Florence Peto-Renaissance Woman of Mid Century," Quilter's Newsletter, January 1980.

Avery, Virginia. "Florence Peto, Path Finder," Ladies Circle Patchwork Quilts, Summer 1983: Carter Houck, Editor.

Clem, Deborah. "Florence Peto," The Quilters Hall of Fame, Rosalind Webster Perry and Merikay Waldvogel, Editors(1984),pg. 125.Gross, Joyce "Florence Peto and Woman's Day," Quilters' Journal, Mill Valley, CA, Vol. 3, No. 2.__________ "Florence Peto," Quilters' Journal, Mill Valley, CA: Winter 1979, Vol. 2, No. 4.

Peto, Florence "American Quilts and Coverlets New York": Chanticleer Press, 1949.

_______ "Historic Quilts New York:" The American Historical Company, Inc., 1939.

_______ "The Crib-Size Quilt". Woman's Day, December 1951, pg. 72-75, 125-127.

______ "A Textile Discovery". Antiques Magazine, 1953, pg. 120-121.

Florence Peto letter to Elizabeth Richardson, March 19, (1951?): courtesy of Bets Ramsey.

Woodard, Thomas K. And Blanche Greenstein. "Twentieth Century Quilts: 1900-1950" New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, 1988.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 
Previous ArticleAll ArticlesNext Article
 
 
Article Archives
 
August 2009
 
July 2009
 
June 2009
 
May 2009
 
March 2009
 
February 2009
 
January 2009
Back
Search this Site
Purchase a Membership

Basic Membership

Redeem a Gift Certificate

Purchase a Gift Certificate for a Friend

Purchase a Series DVD

Click Here to Watch this Show
 The Quilt Show Contests:
Click for more details
 MyAds:
Vicki Welsh Hand Dyed Fabric
Kits, Gradients & Palettes
Shop Online or Custom Order
ChristaQuilts.com
Premium Fabric, Fast Service
FREE US SHIPPING, No minimum
This-n-That Fabrics
Quality Quilting Fabrics
Shop online, Save Up To 50%
Quilt Kit Market
Your source for quilt kits
Visit our online store today
Check out the Bargain Shed
at The Quilting Garden
and save up to 40%!
Heirloom Quilts by Jean
Retro, Fabulous Quilts
Queensbury, NY USA
NEW--* by QuiltMoxie *--NEW
E----* Fun Rotary Cut *-nEw
W-* Binding ePattern *--neW
EverythingQuilts.com
Kits, Jelly Rolls, Charms
Coupon #: QS2012 save 10%
Djs Discount Fabric
Quality Fabric At Low Prices
Vicksburg, Ms. 39180 USA

Advertise on The Quilt Show
 Travel Opportunities:
Travel to Ireland