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    The History of the New York Beauty Quilt Pattern

    Since I can't send all of you a warm quilt in this early Arctic storm,  I will post a diary on quilts for you to enjoy.  Many quilts patterns have names rooted in political events. 

     

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    Illinois 1937 Quilt~ New York Beauty~ Quilt by Elizabeth Wehking

     

    When looking at vintage quilts, I often wonder where the name come from because the pattern don't seem to lend itself to the name. In the 1990's, quilt historians registered every heirloom quilt they could through individual state projects. They documented them in photographs and through recording family provenance. Because of that research they were able to answer some questions about the histories of some of the patterns. The "New York Beauty" is one of those old patterns that always stick out with questions.

     

    The practice of quilting begun in earnest after fabric production started in 1820's. Fabric was very precious because it was expensive to buy and laborious to make before that. Once domestic fabric was available women began making bedding with it. The English and Dutch brought quilting to this country as a way to make warm under clothing by layering fabric with wadding in the middle. By the 1830's the production of fabrics included prints. Cotton and wool was cleaned and carded for the wadding and place between a pieced together fabric tops and bottoms. Quilting stitches was done in a straight line close together to hold the wadding in place.

     

    Stearns and Foster began making cotton batting for quilting in 1846 in Cincinnati, Ohio. It was clean and seedless that came in large sheets. Quilting became a homemaking basic skill in North America. Even the poor households would use scraps and fabric from clothing that was not worn out. Quilting was an opportunity to make something pretty for the bed to decorate the room. I think it was done for the same reason it is pursued today, to do something creative and artistic. The New York Beauty pattern used up many very little scraps of fabric that would normally could not be used for anything else. This pattern was usually chosen for a good quilt used only for guests because it showed off the sewing skills of the maker.

     

    When the state quilt projects was finished very few 19th century quilts in the North East was found as the New York Beauty pattern. So it turned out not to be a pattern popular in the New York region. Many examples was found in the south. Most of the quilts had other names that the families called them like "Crown of Thorns," Rising Sun," Rock Mount" or "Rocky Mountain." The states in the Texas region this pattern was called "Polk in the White House" or "Polk Dallas Texas." According to Barbara Brackman,James K. Polk and George M. Dallas ran for president and vice president in 1844 as Democrats against Henry Clay a Whig. They ran on a platform to annex Texas in the union. This pattern may of started as a political statement by grateful women over the annex because the earliest quilt with this pattern was recorded in 1849. This has been a pattern favored by the Daughters of Tennessee. That makes sense because Polk was from West Tennessee. Texas entered the union as a slave state so this pattern remained popular in the south. Brackman also points out that in 1913, McCall's Magazine called this pattern "Polk in the White House." "Crown of Thorns" and "Rocky Mountain" was the most common names of the quilt pattern from the States Quilt Project.

     

    So why was it now called New York Beauty? It turns out that Stearns and Foster Company started putting pattern instructions in their Mountain Mist Cotton Batting in the 1920's to boost it's sales. They renamed some of the patterns for the Colonial Revival popular at the time. The New York Beauty was one of those early full size patterns offered rolled in the batting. The Streans and Foster pattern features LeMoyne stars in the cornerstones and the blocks are set on the diagonal. The suggested color in the pattern was yellow, orange and white or red, white and blue. The spikes in the pattern was fatter and fewer then the older quilts with a double border in the quarter circle of orange and yellow. The spikes are usually in the older quilts not cut off at the points and the opposite piece is extended in the circle so the points look like they they are long fine points floating. The Mountain Mist pattern also added to the myth of Colonial quilting by claiming the pattern dated all the way back to 1776.

     

     

     

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    William Volkening has one of the largest collections of New York Beauty Quilts.

     

    http://www.billvolckening.com/Bill_Volckening/%22Beauty_Secrets%22.html

     

    Old paper wrapper from Mountain Mist batting and their Blue Book Catalog showing the New York Beauty block.

     

     

     

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    These antique blocks were given to me. Someone worked a long time hand piecing them. The fabric dates in the 1890's and probably the blocks were for a Crown of Thorns quilt or Pickle Dish. The block on the left has a fabric that was very popular during the 1890's that is referred to as "electric". It was the height of fashion to have a dress in this print. This type of print had a dark background with bright neon colors of yellow, green, purple, blue or pink zigzagging through it. The grid in the background is one inch to give you idea how small these pieces are.

     

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    It was reproduced about 10 years ago but in a much larger print for reproducing quilts from that period of time. This is from the Pilgrim/Roy collection for P&B Textiles. The designs came from a salesmen sample book from the 1890's.

     

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    The seam allowance is only an 1/8 inch. The stitches are very small. This was common in very old quilts to have smaller seam allowances then we do today. It was up to the maker as to the size of allowance they worked with.

     

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    When my friend gave me these blocks, they were still tied together in bundles that probably not been touched in many decades. I took the bundles apart to study the fabrics and found that they were very true to color and had the crispness of new fabric. So here is an example of what poison green, red and cheddar really looks like. I know we read and hear about these colors in 19th century quilts but reproduction fabrics or old faded quilts don't always look true to color. The colors green, red and yellow that is close to cheddar cheese was the choice of quilts that were made for special occasions.  With the advent of electric lights our perception of color changed and we began to use other colors in quilting because the poison greens, reds and cheddar no longer cast a glow like they did in lantern light in electric light.  

     

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    References:

    What's in a Name? New York Beauties from the Rockies through Tennessee and Texas. By Barbara Brackman, Jan-Feb 1995 issue Quilter's Newsletter Magazine.

    Comments

    Fascinating, as always, Momoe.  I remember those old batting packages.  I used batting in pillows but I never made a quilt, even though I've taken two quilting classes! 

    I have some old quilt tops from my husband's grandmother that were never made into quilts.  One of them is a Sunbonnet Sue pattern, and another one looks like big segmented pie flowers.  I'll dig them out some time and take pictures.  They're made from old dresses and flour sacks.

    I have a small crazy quilt made with velvet and brocades with feather stitching embroidery.  It's beautiful, but more the size of a crib blanket than anything else.  I don't know what it would have been used for.

    My grandma used to make winter quilts from denim and men's suiting.  The "batting" was old cotton blankets.  They were so heavy!  But warm up there in the north, where the bedrooms weren't heated.

    I'm learning so much from you.  Thanks so much for sharing.


    The pie flowers was probably the Dresden Plate quilt.  I would love the pictures.  I don't have many pictures of quilts.  When you do get time to dig them out, take full shots and close ups.  Quilters like to see the stitches.  Take a bunch of pictures and I will tell you all about the history of the fabrics and patterns.  You can then print it out and keep it with the tops. The history of the crazy quilt, I think is the most interesting. 

    Old blankets of cotton, wool and quilts was used for utility quilts.  These quilts were pieced from old clothing that still had wear left in the fabric.  They would cut blocks out of the parts of cloths like dress pants and shirts that had been out grown or gone out of fashion that had been gently worn for good.   The wool was always turned inside out so that it would look like new.  Some times they would felt it in very hot water, so the fabric would not fray.  Felted wool would be cut into shapes and sewed on the quilt with a button hole stitch around the edge to make wool patch work quilts pretty.  Shapes like stars, animals, flowers, houses and every day things. They would hand tie the quilts with yarn that had blankets in them because they didn't have to worry about the batts wadding up in big balls.  Quilting was used to hold the carded cotton or wool into place.  

    Those old wrappers from the batting are now very collectable as well as the old patterns clipped from newspapers and magazines.  

    Stern and Foster put dates on their wrappers.  The one showing was from 1954.


    Yes, it is a Dresden Plate.  I remember my mother-in-law telling me that.

    And yes, my grandma's quilts were always hand-tied with yarn.  They were more utilitarian than attractive!  I remember she did make her three daughters quilts made from their daughter's outgrown dresses.  I was little but so thrilled to be able to point out my dresses on our quilt. 

    I have a few books on quilting that I would be happy to pass along to you if you send me your address.  Email me at ramonasvoices at gmail dot com.  Some of them may be books you already have but if you email me I'll give you the list and you can tell me if they're duplicates.  It would give me so much joy to know you could make use of them, Momoe.


    Thanks,  I will.  You need to keep your quilt tops wrapped in muslin or in a clean pillow case.  Don't store the top with it touching wood or a box made of acid paper.  


    Good advice.  I think they're under some linens in my linen closet.  I'll have to get them out and take care of them properly.  Thanks.


    I also learn alot from you everyday!


    Thanks.  People don't realize that women have a vibrant history of their own.