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Sarah's avatar

This post has been bouncing around my head for the last three days. I don’t have a background in art history, and I have not been to QuiltCon. What really struck me was the idea of certain quilts, whether it be quilts with words, improv, or simply using only solids, being representative of their time.

I work in a quilt shop that has a very traditional bent. We carry a lot of reproduction fabrics, and a lot of blenders. Before this shop, I worked in a shop that the owner called modern, because of the lines she carried, and most of the fabrics were very bright. What the modern shop owner would really push to sell the fabric was kits. Kits are easy for people because they don’t have to make decisions, and they know how it will look. Many people make their own decisions, but the focus from the “modern” owner was kits. QuiltCon seems to focus on quilts that are more original designs.

At the more traditional shop, we do not sell kits. We don’t even carry full lines of anything. We are busy! People come in looking for ideas. They may be making a pattern, but they are putting a plan together on their own. Younger women who come in for the first time are in love with the reproductions and tiny flowery prints. Many of the colors popular in the 1980’s are popular with the younger women.

All of that to say, of course in 5 years there may be no words on quilts, and then in 30 years it will be back. And that is a good thing. Art should tell us what is in the makers’ minds and hearts at the time it happens. It gives perspective. What has changed? What hasn’t?

Thank you for giving me some great food for thought!

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