We took a weekend trip to Boston for my daughter's birthday, and I had a chance to spend a day at the quilt exhibit at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. The quilts were all from the Roy/Pilgrim collection. The theme of the exhibit was color theory, especially how backgrounds need not be white. One room of the exhibit featured unusual quilts, and this one was certainly unusual.
It is an Amish quilt that includes some printed fabrics, and I love its story. The woman who made it worked in a dry goods store, and the owner would give her fabric from the ends of bolts. When she had gathered a pile of printed fabric, she went to the bishop and told him that she would either have to waste the fabric or break the rule that only plain fabric could be used in a quilt. He told her not to waste the fabric, to go ahead and use it. However, when the quilt was completed, she was so verklempt about the broken rule that she could never make herself use it on a bed!
While in Boston, I worked on a sketch for my own Christmas House quilt.
I'm not sure how I'm going to make it. I'm thinking of using raw edge machine applique for the snow and then machine piecing the house and hand appliquing that onto the background. I may have to starch the dickens out of the house to do that, or I may decide to foundation piece the house onto a piece of muslin before I applique it on.
I'm not naturally very whimsical, so I'm still not sure about the rabbit out near the tree. Somehow the cat in the window seems right, though. Actually, the whole tree thing may change. Possibly the big tree on the left will move down and I'll add a small one to the right of the house. I may use beads to put lights on the outdoor trees.
Thanks for stopping by. All suggestions are welcome.
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