I learned to sew when I was young. My mother is an amazing
seamstress and excels at complicated patterns and tailoring. She made all the
clothes for our family and I spent many afternoons on the floor of her closet watching
her sew.
The first item I sewed was a beanbag toy shaped like a
turtle. I moved on to sewing doll clothes and then my own. I continued making my
own clothes whenever I could steal time on mom’s machine or during the summer
when I visited the grandparents. Unfortunately by the time I inherited my
grandmother’s machine, I was well entrenched in a career that required long
hours and travel and left no time for creative pursuits.
Decades later, my mother-in-law showed me quilt after
beautiful quilt to entice me to learn her craft. There were traditional log
cabin quilts, hand appliqued marvels and quilts with dizzying piecing of
colorful half square triangles. Her passion and skill were so evident, it was
hard not to succumb. My love of sewing overwhelmed my lack of desire and I
plunged into quilting head first.
From this I learned: if you want to make someone a quilter,
show them your quilts. I also learned I love piecing! What I realized quickly
after, however, is that I don’t like repetition.
My mother-in-law gave me a traditional round and round kit
for my birthday that year and I barely completed half the blocks. I just couldn’t
bring myself to continue doing the same thing over and over again. As a result,
I erroneously equated tradition with boredom.
On one hand, I’m thankful, because disdain for tradition led
me to discover art quilting. And yet, I have this lingering sense of loss. I
have never made a log cabin quilt! I have never hand quilted or hand appliqued
anything. Embroidery scares me. I have never attempted those very things from
Anna’s quilts that stunned and captivated me in the beginning.
Thank goodness for the grace of aging! I’m more mature now
and I welcome the opportunity to explore the unknown. What is old, is new to
me. Thank you Misik for a chance to reflect and to reclaim the roots of this
splendid art form.
I see a Log cabin quilts in your future Lisa- Marie! They are my favourite traditional design.
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