26 Wednesday, July 8, 2020 The Nugget Newspaper “Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show” Quilting has a long and vibrant international history By Katy Yoder Correspondent preserved quilt is a Sicilian wall hanging made in the 14th century. It is estimated to have been made about 1395. It portrays the leg- end of Tristan. The piece of art was made using quilting with trapunto (stuffed quilt- ing) on solid white fabric. The piece is now dis- played in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, England. Some researchers believe that quilting, in the form of quilted clothing, was brought to Europe through the Crusades. Muslim warriors wore tightly quilted gar- ments as part of their armor, which was soon adopted by medieval European soldiers. Although fine quilt- ing was a sign of affluence, the sewing together of lay- ers for warmth was done by the poor as well. If makers couldn’t afford carded wool The technique we call quilting crossed many bor- ders and played a part in ancient history. From the beginning, quilts have told human stories, reflected religious and philosophical beliefs, and revealed what people wore, either out of necessity or as adornment. Stitched into layered linen with cotton stuffing inserted to raise sections of the design, faces of those who lived thousands of years ago look beyond the edges of quilts into a future they’d find hard to believe. or cotton to sew between Researchers have uncov- layers, then old blankets, ered examples of quilting clothing or even feathers, around the world. In North straw or leaves were used America, quilting began instead. with immigrants bringing The oldest discovery, their sewing and handwork from 5,500 years ago is of traditions from Europe. For hundreds of years, African American slaves made quilts for their owners and for themselves. When time allowed, women pieced together beautiful quilts with the scraps they gath- ered and saved. The result was a beauty that defied circumstances of servitude and focused on love stitched together in terrible times. That tradition has evolved and thrived through the skilled hands of people like the women of Gee’s Bend, Alabama. Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show was honored to have them as guests in years past to pass along their wis- dom — both with the needle and in beautiful a capella song. The Smithsonian National Museum of the PHOTO COURTESY SISTERS OUTDOOR QUILT SHOW American Indian has one The 2021 SOQS will feature Egyptian tentmakers who do hand-applique of the largest collections of that originated in the Bedouin tribes. Native American quilts from the 1940s. The Northern Plains tribes began quilting out of necessity when buf- falo herds were decimated by Euro-American settlers attempting to subdue the Plains tribes in the 19th century. The tribes had to find alternate sources for robes and ritual practices. Missionary wives taught quilting techniques to Indian women, who soon found imaginative ways to person- alize what they created. The origins of quilting can be traced back to ancient Egypt. Quilting commemo- rated personal stories, histor- ical events and was a reflec- tion of the beauty surround- ing its maker. There are rare examples of old quilts. One PHOTO COURTESY SISTERS OUTDOOR QUILT SHOW an ivory carving, featur- ing the king or Pharaoh of the Egyptian First Dynasty wearing a mantle or cloak that appears to be quilted. It was found in the Temple of Osiris at Abydos in 1903 and is currently in the British Museum collection. The Te x t i l e Society of America at DigitalCommons@ University of Nebraska – Lincoln, offers interesting and informative research into the relationship between See HISTORY on page 27 SOQS Sponso r SOQS Sponso r