Georgia Mountain Laurel April 21

Page 74

“A Quilt is Something Human” Adapted by Kami Ahrens Quilts were handmade by people for people. Every phase of their production was permeated by giving and sharing, from the trading of scraps and patterns and the actual production in “bees,” to the giving away of the final finished work; quilting is a human activity in its essence. There is something about a quilt that says people, friendship, community, family, home, and love. Originally the plan for this project [in 1968] was to find all the patterns that were native to this county. That soon proved to be impossible, for quilt patterns were like ballads: they moved constantly from community to community over surprisingly great distances. Farmers’ journals, newspaper columns, and even quilt pattern companies spread them even farther. Most patterns also have different names, making their origins difficult to trace. The 1960s saw a dramatic revival of interest in textile arts like quilting. One explanation might be the statement made by Mrs. Claude Darnell: “There’s lots of people that wants to go back to the old times.” Basically, the quilt itself consists of a bottom lining, a stuffing of cotton or wool, a top lining, and the top itself. The top is made of a number of squares joined by cloth borders or directly to each other. These squares are usually made up of the same pattern, but can be made by different individuals. In 1968, Foxfire student Emma Jean Buchanan witnessed the most popular way of putting a quilt together: the quilting bee. Each woman that gathered at Mrs. Maggie Vinson’s home had previously completed at least one Dutch Boy or Dutch Girl square. The squares

Edith Darnell with her quilt had all been gathered up, and by the time the women arrived, they had been sewn together into the completed top. Emma Jean wrote down some of her observations: “The women sit around the quilt laughing and joking as if it isn’t a job at all. They never seem to get tired or want to go home. They all seem so content. The gossip is flowing as if I weren’t even around. This is my first quilting, so I sit there in amusement not knowing what will happen next. As I watch them making the final stitches I wonder just why would these women spend their time quilting when it’s cheaper to buy a blanket? Might it be that they quilt just for the social enjoyment?” We asked Edith Darnell the same question: “It helps bring people together when they have quiltin’. It just seems like lots a’pleasure. You’re quiltin’, you don’t know you’re quiltin’—a’talkin’ and a’quiltin’ too. And y’have lunch. I used t’enjoy goin’ t’the quiltin’s.” Some of our other contacts remembered quiltings from their youth: Margaret Norton: “People would work all fall piecin’ quilt tops, and when they got ‘em all pieced, they’d invite in all the neighbors and have a quiltin’ and that quilt would be for th’person that invited ‘em in. And whoever they had th’ quiltin’ for furnished all of ‘em dinner. If it was at your house and it was for you, you’d furnish th’ whole dinner—even if there was twenty women there. They could quilt one out in a day, easy. Lots of times we’ve had quilts out at breakfast and quilted two.” Marinda Brown: “People used to get together and they’d just put up one. They could make as many days out of it as they wanted to. They’d piece one for one family, set in and draw another one for another family, y’know; just kind of kept it goin’.” Annie Perry: “They had quiltin’s, but I never could quilt. My stitches

A quilting bee held in the Foxfire classroom

72 GML - April 2021


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Articles inside

Rabun County Historical Society: Remembering Rabun County’s Gristmills

7min
pages 70-73

Foxfire: “A Quilt is Something Human

5min
pages 74-75

What a Beautiful Mess I’m In

2min
pages 68-69

By the Way

3min
pages 66-67

Of These Mountains

4min
pages 64-65

Ed West Connects People and Property

5min
pages 62-63

Breathtaking Mountain Life Awaits

3min
pages 60-61

Mountain-made Architectural Marriage Wows

3min
pages 56-59

10 Questions for Cherisse Sansone, PT, MLD

4min
pages 50-53

Rabun For the Gospel: The Cure for the World

4min
pages 48-49

Therapy Techniques to Help Your Kids and Adolescents

2min
pages 54-55

Sisters on the Fly at Tiger Drive In

0
page 45

The Family Table

6min
pages 40-43

Finding Peace in Pandemic

5min
page 44

Bon Appetit

3min
pages 36-39

Cover Artist – Anna DeStefano

5min
pages 14-15

GNPA - A Passion for Nature

4min
pages 20-23

Mountain Laurel Festival

1min
pages 28-29

North Georgia Arts Guild

4min
pages 16-19

Celebrate Clayton is Back in 2021

2min
page 26

Property Stewards

2min
pages 30-33

Adventure Out

3min
pages 34-35
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