Quilts from Art Auctions
I've been traveling throughout California attending art
auctions looking for unique quilts. I have had a lot of
success. I have found so many quilts that you could tell were
filled with thousands of hours of careful planning and
stitching.
I was attending at art auction in Orange and found a
wonderful quilt. The quilt was from the Civil War era and was
made in the design of Blazing Stars. There was a wonderful
appliqued red and green swag-like border. The center of the
quilt has a feathered heart hand quilted.
The art auction that I went to in San Bruno had a fabulous
quilt that was made in the 1860s. The quilt was hand appliqued
using cheddar, red and green cotton solid fabrics. The
background was white and the border has a meandering flowering
vine. It was truly special.
I found a great quilt that was made in 1894 while I was at
an art auction in Rancho Cucamonga. The style of the quilt was
really fun. It was called a Victorian Crazy Quilt. There was so
much elaborate hand embroidery over every seam and within the
blocks, it was magnificent.
I was on vacation in Napa and attended an art auction that
had several really nice quilts. The one that I won was made in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania and was completed in the 1870s. I like
the design called Ocean Waves. The chain had earth green and
chocolate brown triangles that were pieced with exceedingly
fine skill and precision. The border and background color was
warm, cadmium orange.
The quilt I found at an art auction in Paradise was an
1840's thin, cotton Quaker quilt, which measures 108" x 88" and
had 10 stitches per inch. It was a Quaker cotton wedding quilt.
The top border, near the pillows, had a blue print and each
side and the bottom had wide borders with North Carolina Quilt
blocks in each corner. There were two rows of North Carolina
Lilies in the center, and one row on each side facing
outward.
The quilt made its way into the art auction because someone
made the decision to sell some of the great historic heirlooms
that were passed down through her family to her. I was very
fortunate to acquire this heirloom that had passed through the
many generations of Quaker families. Now I own one of the great
Pennsylvania Quaker masterpieces.
Log cabin quilts are a design that I have always liked. My
grandmother made a quilt using this design for me when I was
twelve. I found one made in a similar fashion at an art auction
Los Gatos. The quilt was made in the 1870s and was made by
Mennonites.
I was lucky to find the art auction, it was difficult to
find. The quilt is just fantastic. The light and dark design of
this quilt has a red center on one side with two green bars,
two cinnamon bars and two blue bars and then two red bars and
on the other side of the red square in the center are two
yellows, two black and white stripe, two lovely Lancaster blue
bars, and two peppermint stripe bars.
There was an art auction in Huntington Beach that advertised
quilts and I was really happy with the pieces that I found
there. The quilt that I bought had a pictorial motif, like an
album quilt, with a lot of interesting designs. Each block was
quite different and special.
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