I helped my daughter move into a place of her own this past month. One of the things that moved was a coffee table wrapped up in this quilt. The table had been stored in a barn these past few years, having no space suitable for a glass coffee table in a small trailer. The barn space was not kind to the quilt, but it did protect that table for the past three years. The table was unwrapped, cleaned up, and now rests in her little cabin in the woods. I took the quilt home with me to wash off the barn history of wind, rain, mold, rats, cats, and who knows what else crawled around in barns on farms. The quilt came out perfectly clean, with just one ripped portion of the quilt, damaged in the storage/moving process. The ripped portion reminded me of just how old the ripped fabric that tore was. It was the oldest in the quilt.
You see this was
not just a quilt made with purchased fabrics to use in a patterned square. This was a
memory quilt. Each piece of fabric used in this quilt was either part of clothing
Amber once owned, or had it’s own story, instantly recognizable to me for it’s
origin. I also appliqued her name in the middle of it. Now 35 years old, she has dragged that
quilt with her from one end of the country to the other. It still has the corner
where a dog named Zipper chewed edge of it. Zipper slept with her in bed with
that quilt when we lived in Waterloo, and I was finishing my third degree.
There is a piece of fabric that is a leftover piece from the
very first quilt I sewed by hand in Grand Bruit. I had not been able to fetch
my electric sewing machine to Grand Bruit that first winter I spent there so I
decided to hand sew a quilt that winter. The quilt blocks were from Roy’s shop,
rough precut pieces of fabric in a plastic bag. I was pregnant with Amber while
that quilt lay across my lap day after day growing bigger along with me. I had
learned how to sew quilts from my grandmother Liz when I was ten years old, if
not younger.
There is a piece of fabric that was from a Hawaiian type shirt
she had when she was just 6 or 7 years old. She wore that outfit until it just
didn’t fit anymore.
There is a piece of purple calico that I made a pillowcase
for her and new curtains, dresser scarves. That was the year we painted her
room purple with a border of purple bow wallpaper.
There is a piece of baby flannelette from a baby quilt I
made for her, also with her name appliqued in the middle. This quilt became her
nap quilt. She dragged that off with her wherever the nap was going to occur.
Middle of the floor, on the stairwell, across the couch, wherever. I had that
blanket with me for years until I lost it in the fire that New Years Eve.
There is a piece of fabric from a quilt I made for my sister
many years ago, before she was married. I saw that quilt on every visit, and I
know it was certainly well used. That is what quilts are meant for. To use.
There is a piece of fabric from a craft apron I made her
when she was getting messy with her creations or when she was baking. It was a zip
up vest style that she wore for years.
There are several pieces of fabric from clothes that I sewed
for her for years until it wasn’t cool anymore to wear stuff your mom sewed up
for you.
There is a piece of fabric from a lap quilt that I made for
my father many years ago. It was a quillow which meant it had a pocket on it
for your feet when open, and when you fold it up into the pocket, it becomes a
pillow. My dad used that for years. Then my mom used it for years. I sewed her
two new ones after that but she preferred the threadbare one of my father’s. Memories
of course. I get it.
There is a piece of fabric from the first costume I sewed
for her. She was a little clown that year. It was a jumpsuit with a cone hat on
top of crazy clown hair. She had a red nose and a ruffled collar. The costume
was big enough to fit over her snowsuit – a common need on the east coast.
There is a piece of fabric from a set I made for her dolls
one year – bassinet, diaper bag, quilt, baby carrier, all kinds of stuff. She
loved playing with it until she outgrew doll play. Then my niece Olivia played
with it for many summer visits as I left it all behind with my mother.
There are pieces of fabric from doll clothes that I sewed
for Amber. She had so many dresses and other outfits for her dolls of all
sizes. I often had lots of scraps of lovely fabrics from sewing bridesmaid dresses,
wedding gowns, and prom dresses for years.
This is the story of this quilt. This is the story of many quilts.
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