Quilting The Quilt. Marking Out
We have carried our story of quilt information through several chapters to help you decide
on material, and patterns for piecing and quilting. We have told you how to cut and make
up the blocks, and fit them together into a top. That is as far as most modern quilt
makers care to go. It is usually the wisest thing here to call upon a professional
quilter or your church "aid society" to complete the task-especially if you are
inexperienced and the quilt top handsome. It is customary for the owner to furnish
lining, cotton bat and thread. Usually the workers mark and quilt them, charging varying
amounts in different localities and dependent on the local demand for such work, skill of
quilting and the simplicity or elaborateness of designs used. We have known quilters to
charge as little as 75 cents for a spool or as much as $5.00. This charge is based on the
staple 100-yard spool. Number 50 white is the standard for ordinary materials, although
some prefer number 60 or even 70 thread for use on fine cloth such as light satines.
Quilters always have their own collection of quilting patterns from which they evolve the
right fill-in for every space, block patterns, borders, and little leaves, hearts or
flowers for too wide spaced corners. However, many women of today with their artistic
tendencies are using perforated patterns to stamp their own, rather than trust this most
important part to the vagaries and whims of some dear old lady who marks out according to
the same ideas she has had on all the quilts she has ever done. Besides, it is quite
possible to get quilters who can quilt, but will not attempt the marking out. You see
that part is apt to be a monopoly in the aid society. Sister Markham does all of that
with a high hand and flourish, while the timid Sewell sisters quilt to perfection, but
daren't trust their hands at the "art part." Remember that the section quilted around
stands up, while the stitched part is held close. For instance in the Lone Star, we quilt
on each tiny white diamond, and each colored diamond between puffs up.
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