Original price was: $750.00.$650.00Current price is: $650.00.
The Spring Tulip Quilt is a unique masterpiece that brings fresh spring breezes to mind. Surrounded by a scalloped border, this beautiful heirloom was hand-quilted by one woman to ensure even stitching. On a queen bed, this quilt will have an 19 inch drop per side.
Measures 98″ wide x 112″ long.
Homemade quilts combine the warmth of a bed cover with a unique story told by the quilters from Lancaster County, PA. Every homemade quilt is as unique as the family, busy mother or Amish ladies group who uses a needle and thimble to thread stitch on the quilt. Some quilts involve hundreds of hours and thousands of stitches to create a unique patchwork quilt that will last for generations.
When you peruse our HOMEMADE QUILTS you are shopping for an item that tells a story and adds meaning to your bedroom! Discover more about our unique patchwork quilts and the stories behind them…
We have a lot of quilts! Want to see a gallery of the major patterns? Checkout our Common Amish Quilt Patterns.
Called a “charm” quilt in the late 19th century, young women collected hundreds of different fabrics from their family and friends. Perhaps if they collected 999 different squares, their true love would bring them the thousandth–and their happily-ever-after dream, too. One quilting blogger speculates that collecting these fabrics may have given girls opportunities to ask their love interest for a contribution!
The scrap quilt has also been called a “beggar” quilt, referring to quilters asking each other for contributions to their projects. Trying to put together a bedspread without repeating every fabric, they also called the quilts “odd feller” quilts–every piece was an odd feller. Some families recall their mother repeating one square, however, so that a child sick in bed might be entertained looking for the matching patches.
Still another name scrap quilts went by is the “postage stamp” quilt, so called because quilters would use their tiniest scraps, sometimes no bigger than a postage stamp. Perhaps the original motivation was not wasting the smallest piece (historians recall the scarcity of the Great Depression in this), but it also became a challenge at some point. Quilters would collect thousands of pieces to compete with each other in making stitched masterpieces.
Each and every step of the quilt-making process requires a particular lady's know-how. Every one of our women specializes in either piecing or quilting. As a result, at the very least 2 ladies are associated with making each quilt. The ladies that sew the tops with each other specialize in piecing certain quilt patterns. Because each quilter's stitches are different, just one lady does the quilting per quilt. This system permits each woman to end up being an expert in her field.