Good morning, Quilty Peeps! Today's post is another in a series exploring and organizing my thoughts around the many quilts I hope to make "Someday," in order to deter myself from wasting time chasing the so-called Squirrel Projects that sometimes distract me. The idea is that, before I purchase a new pattern or project materials, I'll consult the new Future Quilt Plans page that I added at the top of my blog and decide whether I really want to invest the time in that new distraction project, or whether I really would be happier digging into one of my Bucket List quilts instead. It has recently dawned on me that I probably won't live long enough to make every single quilt that strikes my fancy, so I want to be more intentional about which quilts I admire from a distance and which ones I choose to make for myself.
"In War Time, 1863" by Jane A. Stickle
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"In War Time, 1863" Original Antique Quilt by Jane A. Stickle |
So the quilt I'm thinking about today is one that is going to be very familiar to many of you. I know some of you have already made a version of this quilt and others of you have it on your own Wanna-Make list, but you're probably calling it by a different name.
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Jane A. Stickle Named Her Quilt "In War Time, 1863." NOT "Dear Jane" |
So much has been written about this iconic quilt and I'm not going to rehash all of it here. You can see it in person at the Bennington Museum in Bennington, Vermont (check first before traveling as it's not always on display) and the best history of the quilt maker Jane A. Stickle can be found in the Summer 2013 issue of the Walloomsack Review on the museum's website here. What I do want to say is that I feel emphatically that we should be referring to this quilt as either "the Jane A. Stickle Quilt" or "In War Time, 1863.” One of the many remarkable things about Stickle's quilt is that, very unusually for the period, her quilt includes a label that names her quilt "In War Time, 1863" as well as the number of pieces in the quilt (5,602) and her name, Jane A. Stickle. The "Dear Jane Quilt" moniker comes from a weirdly self-indulgent 1996 book by Brenda Manges Papadakis in which the author presents self-drafted line drawing reproductions of the blocks in the Stickle quilt along with extensive imaginary correspondence with the quilt maker. Don't get me wrong -- Papadakis' book Dear Jane: The Two Hundred Twenty-Five Patterns from the 1863 Jane A. Stickle Quilt has been instrumental in sharing Stickle's exquisite masterpiece with hundreds of thousands of quilters worldwide and both challenging and encouraging readers to attempt reproductions and variations based on the original. And, to her credit, Papadakis herself refers to Jane's quilt reverentially as "The Quilt" and only names her students and their quilts as "Baby Janes." The quilt only became known as The Dear Jane Quilt subsequent to the publication of the book.
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The "Dear Leonardo" Painting (instead of Mona Lisa or La Giaconda) by Leonardo Da Vinci? |
My beloved Leonardo,
I dreamed of you with longing today whilst working on my replica of The Portrait. Who was this woman you painted, and what did she mean to you? She must have sat in your presence for hours on end as you painted, close enough to breathe the same air, staring directly into your smoldering eyes and inhaling the intoxicating scent of your manhood. Was she your mother, as some have supposed, the wife of your father's merchant friend Giaconda, or your own secret paramour, smirking at you playfully? Perhaps she tried to keep a straight face as was customary in portraits of the time, but your ribald stories and dirty jokes broke down her maidenly reserve. You lived through such an amazing time, what with the Renaissance and the Medici family's campaign to Make Florence Great Again... Oh Leonardo, if only we were not separated by the centuries, I know you and I would be lovers as I am truly your soul mate now that I am copying your painting and thereby gaining access to your very soul! I long to lick your paint brushes clean and will never stop searching for more of your precious paintings.
Your Playmate,
Rebecca Grace
Now seriously -- Isn't that WEIRD? That is what the letters in the Dear Jane book are like!! Writing to "My beloved Jane" and signing off "your playmate Brenda" comes straight out of her book! (Okay, maybe without the sexual overtones, but I know y'all come here for entertainment and I aim to please).