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  2. Quilt Index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quilt_Index

    The Quilt Index Wiki which became live in August 2008, is a collaborative, user-generated tool for quilters and quilt scholars featuring information about state and provincial quilt documentation projects, including publication lists and locations where records are housed. The wiki also provides an expanding directory of museums with quilt ...

  3. Log Cabin (quilt block) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log_Cabin_(quilt_block)

    When English paper piecing started to become popular in America the 19th century, certain block patterns began to be called by different names. Names were not standard, but 20th-century quilt pattern books chose names for blocks while acknowledging they could be known by other names. [5] One popular pattern was the Log Cabin. [6]

  4. Quilting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quilting

    Quilting templates/patterns come in many varieties and are generally considered the basis of the structure of the quilt, like a blueprint for a house. Bias binding or bias tape can be made from strips of quilt fabric or purchased as quilt binding.

  5. Patchwork quilt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patchwork_quilt

    The quilting can either outline the patchwork motifs, or be a completely independent design, for when quilting, the design may not necessarily follow the patchwork design, and the design of the quilting may play off the patchwork design. Outline quilting is when the pieces of the pattern are outlined by the quilting stitches. [1]

  6. Narrative quilting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrative_quilting

    The Star Quilt pattern in quilting is an eight-pointed star. It has had many names throughout history, including the Morning Star, the Star of Bethlehem, the Lone Star, the Star of the East, the Mathematical Star, and more. This pattern was widely adopted and used throughout Indian communities, and became a symbol of their cultural identity.

  7. Mensie Lee Pettway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mensie_Lee_Pettway

    More free-form and improvisational, her patterns began as "Nine Patch" quilts, but morphed during the process into, what the artist deemed, "This and That" patchwork. She described her method: "I may start off looking like planning a "Nine Patch," but then I take this, take that, take patches, blocks, strips, and seeing where I am going, laying ...