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Stitched with Love: The Cherished American Tradition of Quilting – P1/2
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Halo creative viewers,
and welcome to
A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms
on Supreme Master
Television.
Today and
in the following week,
we will present
a two-part series featuring
the age-old and cherished
American tradition
of quilting.
Quilting, or sewing
several layers of fabrics
together to make
a padded material,
has been practiced
as far back
as the 1st century.
Since European settlers
brought the practice to
the American continent,
it has become part
of everyday life,
evolving through
many generations
of quilters into a form
of artistic expression.
The Pajaro Valley
Quilt Association
was founded by a group
of women in 1978,
and has become
one of the largest guilds
in the United States
with over 400 members.
Its mission is to encourage
the art of quilt making
and quilt preservation.
The 32nd annual
quilt show
of the Pajaro Valley
Quilt Association
was held in Watsonville,
California, USA.
Hi, thank you
for having me here.
My name is
Mike McNamara.
I go by Mac.
I'm the president
of my guild.
It's a great guild.
We have great traditional
quilt makers and a lot of
innovative quilt makers
and it's a great mix
of people and we have a
wonderful, beautiful day
for our quilt show.
The quilt show features
a dazzlingly rich array
of colors, patterns,
and textures.
Each piece is the product
of thoughtful planning,
diligent acquiring
of materials, and
hours of working with
concentration and love.
Every quilt
has a unique story.
My name is ellen edith
and I specialize in telling
funny family stories
in quilt form.
So for instance this is
Grandmother Ellen,
and she was a wonderful
very vivacious
young grandmother,
and she taught us
how to walk on stilts.
And I like to
use vintage pieces,
so I actually
used a real apron
that she made and
I took the little pocket off
that she had made on her
treadle sewing machine,
and I handmade it down
to scale, so this apron is
a vintage piece off an apron
she made for herself.
It’s like
a wonderful memento
of my family for me.
Quilting as an American
cultural tradition
stemmed out of necessity,
as small groups of settlers
traveled across
the harsh wild plains.
Sandy Shikiuma, the founder
and first president
of the Pajaro Valley
Quilt Association,
shared with us a quote
from the letter
of a pioneer woman
which poignantly
describes this aspect
of their lives.
“We made our quilts
as fast as we could
so our families
wouldn’t freeze and
as beautiful as we could
so our hearts
wouldn’t break.”
And that’s what it’s about.
Women traditionally
quilted out of need,
because you needed
to provide bedding,
you needed to make
something utilitarian.
I look back
when my grandma
was a quilter, she was
making bed quilts and
that’s what you did to
keep your family warm.
Over the centuries,
quilts found their way
from bed tops to walls
as their purpose
developed from
being purely practical
to also being artistic.
So I think that
it’s gone a long way.
And just in the
last 35 years, especially
since early 70s, it really
has taken off as far
as individual expression.
People started designing
their own quilt pieces
and making it
something different
and really looking at it
more as an art.
I started a children’s quilt
with some brightly
colored scraps.
And I just made a bunch
of these units which are
called the “four patch”
and sewed those together.
And then this is called the
“half-square triangle”
and I made
a bunch of these.
And then I just started
playing around and
making different designs.
So I just brought this
as an example.
But if you turned this,
this way, you get
a totally different effect.
So you can play around
until you come up
with a design you like.
Here’s another example
of what you can do with
“half-square triangles.”
And then here are
the same exact ones,
arranged a different way.
Our show on quilts
and quilting will continue
after these messages.
Please stay tuned
to Supreme Master
Television.
I put a lot of fun in them,
a lot of heartfelt meaning
in my quilts.
And I think of the person
I'm making them for
and I say, “I think
she's going to enjoy this.”
Welcome back to
A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms
on Supreme Master
Television.
Today, many people
in the United States
and abroad
have found quilting
to be a wonderful outlet
for creativity,
a source of social support
and friendship, a sense
of accomplishment,
relaxation and joy.
Ms. Sandy Shikiuma,
the founder
and first president
of the Pajaro Valley
Quilt Association,
recounts how her group
was formed.
I belonged to
a small quilt group,
twelve women; we met
in each other’s homes.
There was an article
about my group
in the paper,
and so many of us
were stopped on the street,
“Oh, can I join
your quilt group?
I just have been looking
for something like that.”
So I got the idea to
have some public group,
where everybody could
come and get together
and talk about quilts
and quilt making.
And it took off from there.
I was the first president.
I’m so proud of
how it has developed.
Many of the quilters
of the Pajaro Valley
Quilt Association
have a long family tradition
of quilt making.
My great, great
grandmother,
we finally found out
that not only did she sew
and make clothing,
she also dyed fabric.
My grandmother quilted,
my mom stitched,
and my aunt quilted.
I actually thought
everybody quilted,
I was so shocked
when I discovered that
everybody didn’t quilt.
So the quilts have always
been in my life.
Other members
of the quilt association,
however, were newcomers
to the art form.
It has really brought out
the inner creative me.
My background is nutrition,
and it’s a real leap
to go from
the science of nutrition
to being a creative artist,
a fiber artist.
So I think
I’ve grown tremendously.
To me it was just wonderful
to come into
a group of women
that were so creative, and
we shared this interest.
And it’s been
on many levels
really enriching.
It is important to note
that not all quilters
are women.
I don't think of people
being men or women,
we're all just quilt makers.
And I just
happened to say,
"I can make one of those."
And I made a quilt
back in 1976
and my mom said, “Well,
let's get this old machine
fired up,” and I've been
making quilts ever since.
Mr. Mike McNamara
enjoys surprising
his friends by
making quilts for them.
They only find out
when they read the tag
next to the finished quilt.
Gita is a wonderful woman,
a dear friend of mine.
She really enjoys blue
so I put a bunch
of blue fabrics together
for her quilt.
And I used a technique
that I learned from
Nancy Crow which is
called curved piercing.
And curved piercing is
where you literally take
curved pieces of fabric
and sew them together,
iron them out
and they lie nice and flat.
And it's a technique
that I teach as well and
it's a whole lot of fun.
So I really tried
to make my curved
piercing technique
even more pronounced
by taking long pieces
of fabric and curve
piercing them together,
instead of just short pieces
which is easier to do.
And then I used
this technique called
magic square where
you just cut up a square
such that you interlock
these pieces,
and I just added those
along the bottom,
large whole cloth pieces.
And then
you have a piece like this
which is a leftover, these
goofy little dandelions.
They're actually supposed
to be singing because
on the back of this quilt
that I made, you can see
the dandelions singing
and that's just the back
of the other one.
I thought it was really
kind of fun because
instead of looking like
they're singing, they look
they're screaming because
they came out too early
because they're
in this frosty Arctic
frozen tree landscapes.
I just like the juxtaposition
of fun like that.
From traditional
to whimsical,
simple to complex,
the possibilities in quilting
are endless.
This quilt was honored
“Best of the World”
at the Mancuso Brothers’
2009 Annual
World Quilt Show.
I am Meri Henriques Vahl.
This is my quilt,
“Flower Market
at Chichicastenango
Guatemala.”
I made this
inspired by two trips
that I’ve taken there.
It’s all laid out
on fabric batting and
just cut with scissors.
Some of the pieces
are Guatemala textiles,
some of them are pieces
of old Guatemalan belts
and huipils,
those are the blouses that
the women there wear.
This would be a huipil.
And you just
take different pieces and
lay them out and when
you’ve got your design
the way you want it, you
put a piece of black tulle
over it which is
a very fine netting.
You put a lot of pins in
to hold everything in place
while you then work on it
with free motion quilting.
And after that,
any stitching you do
basically is trapping
whatever fabric
you’ve put there.
So you don’t have to
exactly sew on it.
This was a piece of fabric
that I had,
that had big roses on it,
but it also had little flower,
so I cut hundreds of them
out, put them down here.
I ended up
going around the flowers,
which actually brought out
more colors in them
than was there originally.
This border is pieced out
of Guatemala fabrics
and in triangles.
One growing trend
in the world of quilting
is that creations
are made to be both
useful and artistic.
This is well reflected in
the genre of wearable art.
My name is Rachel Clark,
and I got into
doing garments
because I do clothing.
And when
I was doing clothing
I would miss
the quilt making, and
when I do the quilt making
I would miss the clothing.
So one morning
I just decided
why not marry the two?
And so I just
do clothing using
quilt making techniques
to create garments.
This is what happens
when you walk into a store
and you see fabric.
Now, I walked in
and I saw this wonderful
brown and turquoise, and
they had three pieces.
So I bought three pieces
and I said, I want to
make myself a tiered skirt.
And then, I said, Okay.
When I make
the tiered skirt, I always
make the big shirt.
But I said, But this time,
I’m not going to
make the big shirt.
I’m going to make a capelet
to go with it.
So I made the capelet
to go with it.
I went into another store,
and they had more
brown fabric and turquoise,
so I thought,
Why not go ahead
and make the big shirt?
Now, I’m looking at this
thinking, well,
you know what,
I still have a pile
of that fabric left.
So I thought,
why not make a purse?
So, I made a purse,
to wear it.
Now, I thought it was just
a little bit over the top.
But, I went to a quilt show,
and I carried the purse,
I wore the shirt
and the skirt.
But then that evening
I got a little cool and
I threw my cape over,
and I would say
it was a little over done.
But people kept
coming up to me saying,
“Oh! That looks fabulous.
What pattern did you use?”
So, I’m not sure that
you could overdo stuff
for quilters!
We thank the Pajaro Valley
Quilt Association
and all participants
at the quilt show for
brightening our world with
your charming craft that
is so full of love and joy.
For more information
about the Pajaro Valley
Quilt Association,
please visit
Graceful viewers,
thank you
for being with us today
on A Journey through
Aesthetic Realms
on Supreme Master
Television.
Please join us next week
as our program continues
with more about
the fascinating American
tradition of quilting.
Up next is
Vegetarianism:
The Noble Way of Living,
after Noteworthy News.
May the path of your life
be adorned
with smiles and blessed
by God’s love.
With an ever growing
demand for
eco-friendly cars,
manufacturers across
the globe are working
on innovative solutions
and are presenting
their latest models on
prestigious exhibitions.
For Chevrolet, our focus
is delivering vehicles
that are gasoline-friendly,
all the way to gasoline-free.
And we employ
a few key technologies:
improving internal
combustion engines,
the use of biofuels, hybrids,
hydrogen fuel
cells electrification
of the vehicle.
Join us Friday,
May 14 on
Golden Age Technology
for part two of
Supreme Master Television’s
overview of this year’s
Geneva International
Motor Show
and New York
International Auto Show.
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