Not only is it cute, this little quilt has a great story!
Well, when I got pregnant with my first, my mom and I decided to resurrect the old project and breathe some new life into it. So we went through her stash of 40s reproduction prints and decided to use a lot of different fabrics so it would be more gender-neutral. So we cut out the sashings, and I managed to sew that main part together.
Then my mom took over again and she put on the borders.
My Aunt Mary quilted it on her long-arm machine, my mom sewed the binding on, and I handstitched it down.
I finally finished it a few months before my SECOND was born. (Remember that procrastinating problem?) Even when we got it all put together it still took me forever to sit down and do the handsewing. I really didn't think I would enjoy that part very much - it's grown on me since.
Thanks so much to my mom who helped not just with the sewing and cutting but with the overall look of the quilt and to Mary for doing such a great job on the quilting. I'm really pleased with how it turned out, and it's so cute I'm not sure I really want anyone spitting up all over it. So for now it's hanging on the wall in the playroom.
What's funny (or sad, you decide) is that it took over 20 years, 3 people and many locales to get this thing done. Here's a list of the places it's been worked on:
embroidery - Annandale, VA
Sashing cut - Draper, UT
Sashings sewn - Oceanside, CA (thanks Allyn for letting me use your machine back then!)
Borders sewn - Draper, UT
Machine Quilting - Tooele, UT
Initial binding sewn - Draper, UT
Final handstiching - Stafford, VA
At least it started and ended in Virginia - but sheesh, what a trek. I am kind of glad we didn't put it together way back then - I think the fabrics we had available to us recently make it really cute - who knows what 80's influence would have been at work had we completed it back then! But I love that I have something that my mom, aunt and I worked on together.
6 comments:
thanks ladies! I do love this quilt!
Yea! I know what it's like to work on a quilt that long :-). Here's to finishing them! Feels great doesn't it?! I love it. It turned out so cute! It takes a village to make a quilt? LOL
I think this is adorable. I love the embrodered blocks. Not sure I could have done that well at 12. The procrastination only adds to the enjoyment by all family members. Treasure it all!
Wow! Seriously, wow! You are a rock star!
its super cute! Love the embroidered designs.
Oh I love it! And it does have a great story. You are so right about the fabrics. Definitely better without the 80's influence. I used to embroider and I really need to get back to it.
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