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How to quilt           


© Julian Jefferson, MarGorsson 27/08/2010          Contact         Home

A Wholecloth quilt top is made from a single piece of fabric. In the past, until the manufacture of full bed-width material, strips of fabric were seamed together to make up the top for a quilt. A quilt consists of three layers: The top, a middle layer of wadding and a backing. Quilting secures these three layers using running stitch. 


Wholecloth quilting is often referred to as Durham or North Country quilting.

Fine examples of whole cloth quilting can also be found in  Scotland, Wales and Cumbria and Devon. Wholecloth quilts drew upon a vast quilting pattern library often inspired by nature, including feather ; rose; thistle and tulip.


The heyday for Wholecloth quilts was the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century. Although a cottage based industry quilting provided a much needed source of income for quilters.

 

Anyone can quilt by hand why don’t you  visit ‘How to quilt’


Amy Emms and the revival of quilting


Learning the art of quilting from her mother Amy was at the forefront of the revival of quilting in the 1970s. An enthusiastic teacher and quilter right up until her death at 94. Her book : Amy Emms Story of Durham quilting is a classic book on the art of wholecloth quilting.



Quilt stampers.


Quilt stampers drew out quilting patterns using a blue coloured pencil onto fabric. Quilters would request a particular design on a particular fabric or the would send their own fabric to be marked up.


Men n’ Quilt: The art of the male quilter.


Although now regarded seen as the preserve of women in the Middle East it is men who who are noted for their  textile skills.


There have been notable male quilters in the past. Joseph Hedley of Warden, Northumberland, a tailor by trade soon acquired a reputation for fine quilts.
A Broadsheet report on Joe Hedley’s murder in 1826 stated “He was quite a genius in his line, and the taste which he displayed in the inventions of his figures, and the care and dispatch with which he drew them, were very astonishing”.


I like to concentrate on hand quilting as I find the textures of a whole cloth quilt speak for themselves without the need of patchwork.To see some of my work visit MarGorsson:  At Home.


To Learn how to quilt  visit ‘How to quilt’


Further Information


You can discover more about the fascinating art of quilting by visiting museums such as Bowes Museum and Beamish Museum. Here are some books you may want to request from your local library:


  1. Colby Averil. Quilting. Batsford. 1972

  2. Hake, Elizabeth. English Quilting Old and New. Batsford. 1937

  3. Osler, Dorothy. North Country Quilts: Legend and Living Tradition. Bowes Museum. 2000.

  4. Osler, Dorothy. Traditional British Quilts. Batsford. 1987.


 

Whole Cloth Quilting

You can also discover at first the joy of patchwork and quilting by joining a local quilt group. They often have talks, workshops and exhibitions. An fine example being Bolton Quilters who held an exhibition at Victoria Road Methodist Church in Horwich, I have included some pictures from this exhibition in the Bolton Quilter’s Gallery.