Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Quilt Cabin Dedicated to Wini Alexander



 I really can't talk about the meaning of my new Quilt Research Cabin without sharing some of the story of my mother-in-law's influence in my life. Without her, I don't think I ever would have gotten into quilting.




The three quilts quilts above made by my Winifred Margaret [Waters] Alexander, 1917-1999. These three quilts were instrumental in launching me into the study of quilt history. My documentation of Wini's needlework is ongoing.


In 2005, the LaConner Quilt Museum Invited me to curate an exhibit of Wini's needlework to run January - Feb 2006. It was a great catalyst to get me started in documenting her needlework. Inasmuch as I had saved 30 years of her correspondence, I relied heavily upon the letters I had saved to help create detailed documentation.




Wini, as she was known to her many friends, was a prolific seamstress and needle worker all her life, and taught junior high level Home Economics in the Seattle Public School system in the 1970s. After she retired from teaching, she taught clothing construction and embellishment, as well as quilting and other forms of needlework through guilds and fabric or quilt shops wherever she lived.

Wini helped organize many raffle quilt projects to raise funds for various non-profits throughout her quilting life. She was also instrumental in helping found the Enchanted Quilters of Lopez & Shaw Islands and the Northwest Quilting Connection, and created NQC's newsletter, serving as its editor for 12 years until her passing in August 1999.


After Wini moved to Lopez Island in 1981, people occasionally addressed mail to her simply as "The Quilt Lady on Lopez Island" and the mail invariably reached her!




Cowboy Dan, Sarah in Pink, Dancing Lori Jo all made in 1976 and presented to the kids on Christmas Eve. Below they are snuggled under them on the cots in the living room, cots that were set up in order to create more sleeping space for visiting adults.


Another great thing about these three quilts is that the kids designed them themselves without ever suspecting their grandmother would turn them into quilts.  The eldest created her self-portrait at school by laying down on butcher block paper and having someone draw around her. Then she filled in the face and clothing. When she brought this home, the others wanted to make one, too, so I found similar paper and we made two more. Then I suggested we "send them off to Grandma so she can see how much you have grown." The rest is history.

The additional wonder of these quilts for my children is that Wini used scraps from actual clothing she had made them for the clothing on each quilt, so they recognized themselves immediately!


Xmas Eve 1976


Documenting the Quilts We Create

Wini began to make a list of the quilts she had made after I gave her a journal following my lecture “Documenting Our Lives As Quilters” at a National Quilters Association meeting in Bellingham, WA, in October 1985. 

According to this journal, Wini attempted her first quilt about 1948.  Her first entry reads, “The first quilt I made was not worth remembering. It was a Double Wedding Ring, made by machine with as many shortcuts as possible. It ended up as a furniture cover when we moved.” (Her eldest daughter recently told me that she remembers that quilt!)

Her next attempt at quilting was "an appliquéd tulip made as a bedspread for Ronnie [eldest daughter] in our new Normandy Park House in 1959. Appliqué was so-so, quilting not good. She has it still (?)"  A 2nd quilt was also made in 1959. "Embroidered and appliquéd (1959) Pinocchio Story Quilt for Marlee. Given to cousin Janet after Marlee died." (Note: Wini's youngest daughter Marlee died in 1965 at age 16 of cancer. The family was living briefly in New Orleans at the time.)

Quilt #4, “Spider Web,” was a "strip quilt done on paper which I didn't know about removing! As I quilted it over an old bedspread I realized what a poor job I'd done. Done about 1969/70. Now used for Lopez Quilt show Banner."  

Quilt #5, “Marlee's Star,” Wini records on page 2: "In 1964 I ordered a set of Pennsylvania Dutch Hex Signs for embroidery or quilting. I tried several and Marlee really liked a 12-point star design, so I decided to make a quilt for her hope chest. A few months later she died. Ten years later (1975) I made the quilt. Now used on guest bed."

1975 marks a definitive year in Wini's quilt making for she records making 5 quilts in that one year alone. The quilts that I got my greatest attention were those she made from my children's very own artwork.

The quilt immediately below dated 1976 is the one that really grabbed my attention. I began sending our eldest child's artwork to Wini when Sarah began scribbling on paper at age 2. When Sarah turned 10, Wini gave her a quilt for her birthday made entirely of Sarah's own artwork.  I had had no idea one could turn a child's art into an applique or embroidery pattern for I had never made anything but clothes and not even those for several years when I first saw this quilt.

In 1971 when the Whitney Museum in New York City exhibited quilts as art for the first time, a resurgence in interest in quilting making was already in the air. This quilt exhibit unexpectedly broke ALL attendance records at the Whitney up to that point in its history.  As a  result, they extended the exhibit by several months and then created two traveling exhibits, one to tour the U. S. and the other to tour Europe and Japan.

The rest is history, as we all like to say. My take on quilting in America at this point in time is that the Whitney unintentionally kicked off the coming quilt revival BUT it was the American Bicentennial that sent the interest in quiltmaking and Americana into the stratosphere.








From 1976 Wini's quilt making and her quilting skills took off. By now, in addition to daughter (Ronnelle nicknamed Roni) and son (Gary), Wini had a daughter-in-law (Karen-me) and three grandchildren (Sarah, Daniel, and Lori Jo), all who dearly loved her quilts and anything she made with thread and needle. The documentation of Wini's needlework history, especially her quilting, is ongoing. One of the biggest challenges will be to discover the specific sources for her patterns.

PS: Wini's Signature Friendship Quilts are now documented and are included in the Quilt Index Signature Quilt Pilot Project. Here is a link to one.

Here is a link to the Essay about the Signature Quilt Pilot Project. I was very fortunate to be invited to participate in this project.





-- To Be Continued --


Squirrel sunbathing



Junco nest



Junco







Stunned woodpecker had hit the large living room window, bounced 
to the deck barely clinging to the railing by a toenail for several minutes.

6 comments:

  1. Great pics! Looks like an Oregon junco! Haven't seen one of those since I moved back East from California. Good thing the nest was saved. Those birds eat a lot of bugs.

    Mary

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    1. Alas, the babies are now gone. They were there about 5pm before supper and when we checked on them about 7pm, the nest was empty!

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  2. I love the quilts and the great story that goes with them...particularly the picture of the kids using the quilts!

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    1. I think it is close to my all-time favorite photo of my kids, Tim. Another great thing about these particular quilts is that the kids themselves designed them without any of us realizing Wini was going to make a quilt out of their art work!

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  3. What a wonderful tribute to your MIL. You must have been close.

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    1. Yes, we truly connected thru needlework. And I got her interested in family genealogy.

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