1944
I have photos of 25 quilts dated 1944.
The file dated 1934 has twice as many.
E H with old-fashioned taste dated a Bear's Paw with
Turkey red thread
Somehow she had enough true Turkey red to finish this quilt.
1944
Can we call the style old-fashioned or classic?
The popular album design going back 100 years
in up-to-date dress prints.
The problem was that cotton and cotton fabrics were going to supply the war.
1944
The shortage seems to have gotten worse after D-Day and other European victories as the U.S. concentrated on the War in the Pacific. Dr. Claudius T. Murchison was the industry's spokesperson during the War.
An imaginary feedsack for Dr. M.
Director of the Cotton Textile Institute during the war.
Nebraskan Mrs. Heitz didn't get why she was forced
to buy feed she didn't want when, "You can't buy material to
make a house dress."
But if it was important, people found a way:
The style may look old-fashioned but this quilt honoring men in the Army and Navy is dated 1944. Sue Reich uses the term Roll Call Quilt to describe these name quilts listing soldiers and sailors.
1944
Collection of the Dorcester Historical Society
True Blue Class of Spedden Church Dorcester County, Maryland
The style may look old-fashioned but this quilt honoring men in the Army and Navy is dated 1944. Sue Reich uses the term Roll Call Quilt to describe these name quilts listing soldiers and sailors.
Sue Reich Collection
Newport, Texas, 1944
1944
A few of the popular patterns made with prints.
1944
1944
1944
1944
Two from the Quilt Index
1944
And another pair
1944
Amanda Snyder from the Oregon project,
a version of McCall's Dresden plate
1944
Crib quilt, sort of a tile quilt, making the most of tiny scraps
4-H Club News 1944
Two fancy appliques:
1944 with the name E Sterling Marsden
American Museum of Folk Art Collection
Eva D. Rex, 1944 from a Mountain Mist pattern
Here's a great scrappy quilt:
Ray & Claire Vlasin collection & the Quilt Index
Dated 1944
Pretty spectacular for the middle of a fabric shortage.
I bet she had access to fabric from a clothing factory---
cut-aways of stripes.
I haven't seen a name for the pattern.
Print this out on an 8-1/2" x 11" sheet. See
the inch square for scale.
From the mid-20th century.
Blocks on point from BlockBase