RSS Facebook
 

Archive for the ‘California’ Category

Antique Quilts Disappear

Feb 15 2000

Anne Copeland has reported the loss of several antique quilts. All of the quilts listed below were stolen from Annes home in Lomita, California. Unfortunately, Anne does not have photographs of these quilts and quilt tops.

  1. Unique Double Wedding Ring Quilt, machine quilted with long-arm quilt machine in a stippling pattern. Double bed size (approx. very light lavender (the almost turn-of-the-century lavender, not the 1930s lavender) with brown, black and dark color stripe and check rings. The quilt was probably made during the first quarter of the 20th century. This quilt is odd looking, as if it were made by convicts, and has self binding, and a loose muslin backing.
  2. Crazy quilt top, large with dark color velvets and some corduroys and wool. There is a large circle in the center divided into four pieces, each in a different dark color. Moderate amount of embroidery with simple styles such as feather stitching, herringbone. Probably made in the 1970s. Very attractive piece and edges were raw (not finished) when it was stolen. NOT foundation-pieced.
  3. Friendship sampler type cotton quilt top and back, approximately double or full bed size. Greens, browns, and other earthy prints in woodsy motifs. Blocks are set on point with a brown on brown cotton check in between and in outer setting triangle blocks. Inner border (green) with outer double cream or beige print outer border. Backing is same brown on brown cotton check with butterfly block and another block on the back.
  4. 1930s Orange cotton quilt top (very bright pumpkin or bittersweet orange) in full bed size with arrow-like shapes approx. 2-1/2″ wide between blocks in multiple pieced prints of browns, blues, and other darker prints. Unsure of pattern name (not any variation of Flying Geese).
  5. 1870s log cabin remnant in light colors (was found inside another quilt), with name of a person in the corner and 8 (possibly made by 8-year-old child). Double pinks, and many fine fabrics that are in very poor condition, Was probably a small bed size. All cotton with possible satin or ribbon strips in some places.
  6. Mink teddy bear won in nationwide word competition around 1986 or 87. Dark brown mink about 8″. Made from recycled fur.

Several other items (Raggedy Ann and Andys) were also stolen at the same time, but Anne realizes they would be very difficult to trace.

These quilts were part of a lecture series about quilts. Any information leading to their recovery will be greatly appreciated. Please contact Anne Copeland through the Lost Quilt Come Home Page.

 

Navy Blue Log Cabin Jacket

Feb 01 2000

Log Cabin Jacket by Joan McClaren

Log Cabin Jacket by Joan McClaren

Joan McClaren lost her handmade log cabin jacket about four years ago (approximately 1996?) in the Santa Barbara area of California She believes she may have accidentally left it on a chair. The jacket was made with navy blue fabrics with 6-inch log cabin blocks. Sketch of jacket and fabrics used are shown to the right. The jacket had navy blue lining with a tiny pink flower print. All fabrics were 100% cotton.

She does have scraps of the fabric so she can positively identify the jacket, but it does not have a label. The sleeves were made with extra length so they could be rolled up to form cuffs. The jacket has wooden buttons.

Fabrics used

Fabrics used

Joan is offering a generous reward for the return of this jacket. Joan reported, “I would really love to have this jacket back. I sewed on it every day for 5 weeks. It was a beautiful garment. I can’t believe I was so careless and lost it!!!”

If you have seen a jacket that fits this description, please contact Joan at McClarenX2@aol.com. You can also contact her by writing to: Joan McClaren PO Box 604 Goleta, CA 93116

 
Comments Off

Tags: , , , , ,

 

Purple Sampler Quilt Top

Feb 01 2000

On October 22, 1999 Karen Semore sent her purple sampler quilt top out to be quilted. Two weeks after she sent it, she was told it had not arrived at its destination. Karen sent the quilt from Lakewood, Colorado to Paso Robles, California.

The quilt top was a full size sampler with twenty 12″ squares. She used white on white for the background and sashing. Each block has a black border and is made up of different shades of purple. She did not take a picture of the finished quilt top because she was waiting for it to be quilted.

The blocks that were included on this quilt top are:

  • Double Pinwheel
  • Eddystone Light
  • Ladies Aid Album
  • Double X
  • Contrary Wife
  • Darting Birds
  • Simplex Star
  • Thrifty
  • Ohio Star
  • Swamp Angle
  • Basket
  • Card Trick
  • Union
  • Album
  • Broken Window
  • Corn and Beans
  • Summer Winds
  • Churn Dash
  • A Star is Born

If you have any information regarding this lost quilt top, please email Karen Semore at sawher@sbcglobal.net.

 
Comments Off

Tags: , , ,

 

Attila’s Laundry

Jan 26 2000

Attila's Laundry by Linda Colsh

Attila's Laundry by Linda Colsh

Attila’s Laundry by Linda Colsh was made to enter into the Pointillist Challenge.

On June 24, 1996 Linda took this quilt, another in-progress quilt, and her sewing kit to a shipping company to be boxed, insured, and sent it to herself at her new address. She was moving from California to Belgium. Linda was afraid to put her quilts in her luggage or in the shipment of their household goods via the Panama Canal (because mildew was a threat during the months at sea). Linda had planned to take the quilts in her carry-on luggage, but she was limited to only one bag for the international flight. Unfortunately, the quilts were never seen again after she dropped them off with the shipper.

Half of the fabrics in Attilas Laundry are from the Pointillist collection. The techniques Linda used were machine piecing, machine inlay, machine quilting with silver thread, and machine couching. The back is also pieced and has a photo transfer of Hagia Sophia in Istanbul and a computer printed label sewn on with “Attilas Laundry”, Linda’s name and her two addresses (local Belgian address and APO address) and the year it was made, 1996.

Attila’s Laundry is a quilt about a Turk and his country. Turkey holds a unique position because it not only physically bridges the Easter and Western worlds but, as a secular Moslem country, it also bridges East and West philosophically and socially. Linda writes, “Our guide and guard for the trip, Attila, was the very example of this position: he was carrying out a good deal of womens work at home with his wife ready to deliver their first child. I was quite impressed to see such gender crossover in a Moslem society. Turkey is a very delicate diplomatic relationship for the US; indeed its place in the politics of the Middle East and Europe is very pivotal. My quilt is an attempt to capture the uniqueness of an individual, a situation, a city and a country.”

The loss was reported to the police, the US Postal Service, the Military Postal system, and local quilt guilds, but no information has been revealed. If you have seen this quilt, please contact Linda at LovellColsh@compuserve.com.

 
Comments Off

Tags: , , ,

 

Half Log Cabin Baby Quilt

Dec 21 1999

Sherry Jystad reported the loss of her fourth daughter’s baby quilt. The quilt is pink, blue and yellow and is made with the half log cabin block. The quilt also has lace around the outer edges.

The quilt was lost around March 1998 when they were going to the beach with relatives. Sherry believes the quilt may have fallen out of her van or blown off the wagon at Huntington State Beach in Orange County, California.

If you know anything about this quilt, please contact Sherry at gsjystad@home.com.

 
Comments Off

Tags: , , ,

 

Overall Boys Quilt

Oct 03 1999

Overall Boys by P. Jimerson Stow

Overall Boys by P. Jimerson Stow

This beloved quilt was given to Pamela Jimerson Stow when she was a born in 1958. Her aunt in Iowa lovingly made it for her and Pamela always treasured it.

The quilt was lost when Pamela was living in Hilmar, California or in West Pittsburg, California around 1985 or 1986.

Pamela says, “I do not know if somebody took a liking to it and walked off with it. Or if my older daughter wrapped her sister in it and forgot to bring it home with them. My heart is heavy each time I think of my baby quilt and the care my own mother had taken not to loose it so it could be passed along to my family. I tell my husband if I ever see this quilt I will go to no end to get it back.”

The quilt was made up of Overall Boys (similar to Sunbonnet Sue). The photo shown below IS NOT a picture of her quilt, but it is a reproduction quilt that was made using Pamelas quilt as a pattern.

The blocks in Pamelas quilt were done in light kiwi green and the boys were in many different colors. Each boy was outlined with black stitching. The quilt was made of a heavy fabric and is just larger than crib size.

Pamela concludes, “Like many of us with missing quilts, all I hold is a memory that can never be taken away from me. I see it everyday but never had a photo taken because I never thought I would lose it.”

Protect your quilts and your memories by taking time to photograph and document your quilts now!

If you have any information on an Overall Boys quilt that fits this description, please contact Pamela Jimerson Stow at PAMBLA1958@aol.com.

 
Comments Off

Tags: , ,

 

Treasured Crazy Quilt Jacket

Aug 24 1999

Crazy Quilt Jacket by Lou Anne Sassone

Crazy Quilt Jacket by Lou Anne Sassone

After LouAnne Sassones mother-in-law died, a crazy quilt jacket that had been promised to her was mistakenly given away to a non-quilting relative who sent it to her local thrift store in Rio Vista, California. By the time she was alerted, it was gone from the thrift store.

LouAnne writes, “This was a work of art and had hung on a wall or doorknob ALL the time. My daughters were as devastated as was I when the sister-in-law told me that she thought it an ugly thing and took it to her local thrift shop. She checked with the thrift shop and, of course, it was gone.”

The jacket was made by Charlotte Tuggle in the 70′s and was a true family treasure. She had promised that one day it would be LouAnnes; however, Mrs. Tuggle did not put it in her will. One thing that she did put in the will was that her clothing was all to go to her sister-in-law, so her husband, in his grief, gathered the jacket up along with everything else in the closet and carried it off to Rio Vista.

A happy coincidence has developed from this loss, however. LouAnne inherited all her mother-in-laws sewing items and she had kept all the many scraps left over from making the jacket and a vest that was also lost (no picture of the vest exists). This led LouAnne to get more involved with crazy quilting and now she has truly found her artistic medium at last after many years of struggling creatively. She is now planning a crazy quilted runner for the top of her piano with photo transferred pictures of her mother-in-law in the middle.

If you have any information regarding this crazy quilt jacket, please contact LouAnne at LASassone@aol.com.

 
Comments Off

Tags: , , ,