Log Cabin Patchwork Quilt Top "Bandana #1" Quilt Top ~ Not a Kit ~ Sewn~”~Large Medallion Center for your quilt, Table Cloth, Wall, Lap Quilt 62" X 62"

BEAUTIFUL!!!


You could just add borders and use this as the center of your quilt!

The fabrics are 100% Cotton!

The Fabrics:   are Assorted Name Brands.


The Blocks: are Beautiful Blues and Cream on Cream

white on White or Cream on Cream fabric maybe a little thicker and harder to hand quilt.


Layout Design:  The Layout is the "Bandana #1" Design. This is a variation of the Patchwork Pattern

The “Bandana #1” Patchwork Variation  Quilt Blocks are set together in the "Barn Raising Design" with lot of “Old Time Charm”!

 

Because of the fabrics, each log will change in appearance because of the placement of prints.

100% Quilter’s Cotton!!

This Top is Unfinished- still needs to be quilted. This is the top only. You’ll need to add a border, batting, back and binding.

Newly completed top - personally machine sewn - by me

Patchwork Quilt Top – app 62”X62”

Personally machine sewn by me in NON-SMOKING, PET FREE environment!

Perfect to finish off to make a lap quilt, wall hanging, or small throw, baby quilt, so many uses!

History of Patchwork Quilt:

Little is known about the Patchwork Quilt before the 18th century. Improvements in textile manufacturing brought about fashionable printed cotton fabrics at the end of the 18th century. Expensive and high status printed cottons were used by the more wealthy. Simpler and cheaper fabrics were used by the lower class.

The creation of patchwork quilt designs was really popular with the first settlers and continued as the country expanded. The block style patchwork design was the result of an approach to the solution of several problems faced by the colonial and pioneer quilters. Bed-covers had to be made; lots of quilts were needed because of drafty houses. Also the dugout houses carved into the sod of the prairie called for many quilts to keep the settlers warm during the bitter cold winters. Money was scarce and cloth was expensive. So many quilts were made from scraps of cloth, recycled form making clothes or worn out clothing. Even a scrap of fabric as small as 1” was often used.

The blocks were made 1 by 1 and later joined together.

 A patchwork quilt was often a record of a family’s history, using small bits of clothing and other household fabrics.

With the 20th century came two wars and the Great Depression led to a scarcity of available materials. Many quilts were made from recycled clothing that had been cut into pieces and sewn back together to form the designs.

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History of Lone Star Quilts


The Lone Star Quilt is also called the Texas Star.


The Star quilts were very popular with the American Indians.


The Star Pattern began to become popular around the time of the Alamo. By the time Texas achieved statehood in 1845, the Texas Star Quilt had become an important symbol of the state.


Whether you call it a Texas Star or Lone Star, this popular pattern has withstood the test of time. You don’t have to be from Texas to appreciate this pattern’s place in history.


What began as a heartwarming craft, became a chore, and has now come back to a heartwarming craft.



This small Quilt Top is the perfect size for Wheel Chair Patients to use as a Lap Throw. Great for Nursing Homes and Hospitals alike! They provide a modest covering for men, women, and children. Cheer up you “Loved” ones with a burst of color & a reminder of Love! Great for the little ones to cuddle with!  Or take to a local Nursing Home or Hospital and give to those you don’t even know, cheer up a Veteran, so many uses for your small quilting projects!

So easy to hand quilt, tie or machine quilt!

Also would be great to use as a center for your larger quilts!

Special rates for shipping on multiple items ordered at the same time.

If you have any questions, or comments - please feel free to contact me!

Please check out my EBay Store for more BEAUTIFUL Items!!

Bio:  My mother started teaching me embroidery stitches when I was 4. By 6 I was being taught to use her sewing machine. I was making most of my clothes when I was a teenager, at that time I also began to learn to make quilts. By the mid 70’s I was sewing professionally, by the mid 80’s I was wholesaling quilts to a business – they would buy all that I could make. In the 90’s my husband and I traveled around the United States to craft shows and setting up in malls selling the quilts and other craft items that we made.

I’m now 69, retired and making these items in our home. I’m supplementing my Social Security by trusting God and selling the things on my Ebay Store.   I’ve been making the Lone Stars, Log Cabins (and Log Cabin variations), Giant Dahlia, 9 Patches, Double Irish Chains, Triple Irish Chains, Appliqued & Pieced combinations, and many others for several years.

Sewing skills have been passed down in my family for generations; I still have the treadle sewing machine that my Grandfather gave to my Grandmother on their wedding day back in 1912. I’ve been sewing for well over 60 years.

Please enjoy these items and know that they’re made with LOVE!