Wednesday, December 12, 2012

One Old, One New


In 1976 I made a quilt for my dad for Christmas. I used scraps I had from my high school days that were already 15 years old (!) and then purchased the red fabric for the border and an Ely and Walker print for the back.


 

I began by tracing around a template for each and every log and made the entire quilt top in three days. I tied the main portion with yarn and machine quilted the border in a diamond design. I gave Dad the quilt on Christmas Eve 1976 at my brother's house.


Sixteen years later, after my dad died, my brother took the quilt to his cabin in the Adirondacks where it was lovingly used until 1996 and desperately in need of repair. I brought the quilt home and appliqued new logs over the disintegrating ones. I still had some of the original fabrics in my scrap bag. Then early this year, my brother asked if I could please repair the quilt as it was literally falling apart. After taking one look at it I said it would be easier for me to make a new quilt than try and repair it - again!

 

My inspiration for this new quilt came from an article I saw in Quilter's Newsletter in 2002. I knew I wanted to use an Adirondack-style fabric for the border and a fishing-themed fabric for the back.

 



With that in mind, I decided to use all my leaf print fabrics for the Birds-in-Air blocks. I thought it would be really nice if I included fabrics that my mother had used in her quilts and applique pictures so all the solid  fabrics were hers.


I started making Autumn in the High Peaks in September. There were days when I sewed four blocks a day to keep on schedule. I finished the top in three weeks and had it machine quilted by someone in our guild.
 

Luckily my brother does not know how to use a computer so he will never know that I made this quilt for his birthday on the 27th :)

 

2 comments:

  1. oh your quilt is beautiful. I love the log cabin quilt and my plan for next year is to make a few log cabin quilts. I have always admired many antique log cabin quilts for the fabrics and how the setting can make a quilt look so different
    thank you for sharing yours with us
    kathie

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  2. Thank you ~ and you're welcome! I made one other Log Cabin quilt when my daughter was in college. The center square in each block was chili pepper fabric. :)

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