When it rains here, it pours. When it pours I quilt. In the 3rd and 4th quarter of the 19th Century, the Log Cabin Quilt became popular when people started roaming more after the Civil War. The lattice bars became to signify the idea of the Log Cabins built by pioneers. Little House on the Prairie and all that sort of thing.
Just finished two large quilt tops. So much left to do. Like backing. Batting. Stitching.
Decided to do the quilts in my favourite style of all; civil war . The first was a Log cabin pieced around an orange red centre. The reddish centre speaks of hearth and home, and the dark and light pieces signify the dark and light of life in the family.
Some of the fabric was reproduction,some was not. Most came from my downstairs stash. Then I dunked the entire panel in tea and coffee and let it steep. So to speak.
"Good friends are like quilts. They never lose their warmth."
The blocks for the Log Cabin I did in alternate colour schemes. One earthy, one in a dull blue civil war theme. I kind of ran out of the dull blue, so at one point had to introduce a lighter blue,but I liked it a lot, especially once it was soaked in the tea and coffee.
It's good to try and use up as much of the fabric you have lying around in boxes. Makes it challenging when trying to find enough fabric, but since I am somewhat a hoarder, there seemed to be plenty of fabric to go around.
"Friendships are sewn one stitch at a time."
Then the finished Log Cabin panel took on a darker, smoother overtone after sitting in its bath for half the morning. Older Log Cabin quilts were done with scrappy fabric pieces on foundations to make them stable.
The colours tend to give off a radiating pulse.....optical illusion.....I love the Log cabin block. Has many ways of being set.There are many variations on the design of log cabin. Barn Raising, Sunshine and Shadow, Straight Furrow, to name a few. This particular design I found was called "Independence".
"April 14, 1861. Civil war has finally been declared....first gun of rebellion was fired at Charleston"- from the diary of Rebecca L. Richmond ( Civil War Diary Quilt). Many quilts were made of silk, wool and cotton pieces and were incredibly elegant and used to raise money for the war effort at the time.
Both northern and southern women made quilts for the army and their families.
"My soul is fed with needle and thread."It became important for the army men to have warm quilts in the hospital cots. The women of the country sewed quilts, using their stash of fabric to make many quilts . The basic nine patch quilt design was used quite a bit.
Stripes, woven fabrics were used the most.
"We should have nothing in our houses, which we did not either know to be useful or believe to be beautiful." - William Morris, the Beauty of Life, 1880
"May your bobbin always be full."
Civil War Log Cabin Helpful Bo, my sewing buddy......
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