Every
fall through early spring, I tote my sewing machine to a quilting group where,
at long tables set with our electric machines and other sewing paraphernalia, I
and my best friend enjoy what I consider to be a modern quilting bee.
Quilting has been around a long time. The earliest known quilted
garment, dating from Egyptian First Dynasty about 3400 B.C., adorns a carved
ivory figure of a Pharaoh. In 1924 a quilted floor covering, dating from
somewhere between the first century B.C. to the second century A.D., was discovered
in Mongolia.
Quilting came to Europe courtesy of the crusaders via the Middle East in the late 11th century. Quilted garments were popular with the Middle Ages’ knights who wore them under their armor for comfort. In the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, visitors can view the earliest known surviving bed quilt, from the fourteenth century. The quilt is made of linen and wool padding, with a center design containing scenes from the legend of Tristan.
When the settlers came to the new world from Europe, they
brought the art of quilting with them but probably not quilts, since the
earliest quilts were considered a luxury item. These quilts were elaborately stitched
and appliquéd using expensive fabrics, not a patchwork of leftover materials. Patchwork
quilts, by the way, are an American craft.
American history’s first reference to quilts is in a Salem,
Massachusetts household inventory from the end of the seventeenth century. Because
most of the early American quilts were probably made from scraps of used
clothing and used until they were completely worn out, we don’t have any
physical examples of colonial quilts. The earliest surviving American pieced
quilt is the Saltonstall quilt from 1704. Historians are certain of the dating
on this quilt because when the quilt fabric wore out they found a dated piece
of newspaper that had been used in paper piecing the quilt.
In the nineteenth century quilt-making flourished in
America, especially in the period between 1825 and 1875. The quilting bee gained its popularity in
America during the mid 1800s as settlers began moving west. The isolation of
many women in the Great Plains areas made quilting bees an attractive and
important asset. The patchwork squares the women had worked on all winter
beside their firesides could be layered and stitched together into a finished
quilt in one day. Anyone who has every tried to hand stitch a quilt can tell
you that kind of speed cannot be accomplished by a lone woman. Even today, with
all our modern conveniences to shorten house tasks, hand stitching a quilt
takes a lot of evenings.
Our modern-day quilting bee doesn’t look like the one
pictured on this YouTube video
because most of us are not hand stitching our quilts. But we do follow another time-honored, quilting bee event—talking with other women. For 2-4 hours twice a month, the twenty or so other women who attend, and my best friend and I, stitch, show off our quilts, and talk about everything from income tax to health issues to husbands and newborn grandkids.
This is where my modern day quilting bee’s resemblance to
the old-fashioned quilting bee ends. The nineteenth century American quilting
bee wasn’t just about finishing a quilt in a day or catching up with the girls.
In fact, it was often the jumping off place for a community affair. A quilt on
the frame meant socialization for the women, two community meals, and sometimes
even dancing in the evening. And dancing in the evening, for many a young lady,
also meant courting.
I can already see your writer minds going a mile a minute.
Quilting bee equals dancing, equals courting, equals romance, equals
happily-ever-after. J Now if we can just figure out how that works in a
modern day setting.
![]() |
One of Catherine's UFO quilt tops (Log cabin) |
As for me, my quilting bee equals time with other ladies
with whom I share a common love—quilts. It doesn’t hurt that lunch with friends
is also a part of the day. I don’t even mind that most of my quilts are still
UFOs (unfinished objects).
In fact, it might take a real, old-fashioned quilting bee for me to finish
some of my projects.
I wonder who has a big enough basement?
Don’t forget to
leave a comment to be entered in the
drawing for Sins of the Mothers by
Caryl McAdoo.
Catherine Castle is an award-winning author. You can check
out her inspirational romantic suspense TheNun and the Narc at Amazon.