Although the quilt is one of the most
familiar and necessary articles in our households,
its story is yet to be told. In spite of its
universal use and intimate connection with our lives,
its past is a mystery which at the most can
be only partially unravelled.
The quilt has a tradition of long
centuries of slow but certain progress. Its story
is replete with incidents of love and daring, of sordid
pilferings and generous sacrifices. It has figured
in many a thrilling episode. The same type of
handiwork that has sheltered the simple peasant from
wintry blasts has adorned the great halls of doughty
warriors and noble kings. Humble maids, austere
nuns, grand dames, and stately queens; all have
shared in the fascination of the quilter’s art
and have contributed to its advancement. Cottage,
convent, and castle; all have been enriched, at one
time or another, by the splendours of patchwork and
the pleasures of its making.
In its suitability for manufacture
within the home, the quilt possesses a peculiar merit.
Although exposed for a full century to the competition
of machinery, under the depressing influence of which
most of the fireside crafts have all but vanished,
the making of quilts as a home industry has never
languished. Its hold on the affections of womankind
has never been stronger than it is to-day. As
a homemaker, the quilt is a most capable tool lying
ready at the hand of every woman. The selection
of design, the care in piecing, the patience in quilting;
all make for feminine contentment and domestic happiness.
There are more quilts being made at
the present time in the great cities as
well as in the rural communities than ever
before, and their construction as a household occupation and
recreation is steadily increasing in popularity.
This should be a source of much satisfaction to all
patriotic Americans who believe that the true source
of our nation’s strength lies in keeping the
family hearth flame bright.
As known to-day, the quilt is the
result of combining two kinds of needlework, both
of very ancient origin, but widely different in character.
Patchwork the art of piecing together fabrics
of various kinds and colours or laying patches of
one kind upon another, is a development of the primitive
desire for adornment. Quilting the
method of fastening together layers of cloths in such
a manner as to secure firmly the loose materials uniformly
spread between them, has resulted from the need of
adequate protection against rigorous climates.
The piecing and patching provide the maker with a suitable
field for the display of artistic ability, while the
quilting calls for particular skill in handling the
needle. The fusing of these two kinds of needlework
into a harmonious combination is a task that requires
great patience and calls for talent of no mean order.
To our grandmothers quilt making meant
social pleasure as well as necessary toil, and to
their grandmothers it gave solace during long vigils
in pioneer cabins. The work of the old-time quilters
possesses artistic merit to a very high degree.
While much of it was designed strictly for utilitarian
purposes in fact, more for rugged service
than display, yet the number of beautiful old quilts
which these industrious ancestors have bequeathed
to us is very large. Every now and then there
comes to light one of these old quilts of the most
exquisite loveliness, in which the needlework is almost
painful in its exactness. Such treasures are
worthy of study and imitation, and are deserving of
careful preservation for the inspiration of future
generations of quilters.
To raise in popular esteem these most
worthy products of home industry, to add to the appreciation
of their history and traditions, to give added interest
to the hours of labour which their construction involves,
to present a few of the old masterpieces to the quilters
of to-day; such is the purpose of this book of quilts.
Marion, Indiana
March
18, 1915.