A CLOUD OF QUILT PATTERNS: AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF PATTERN IN BLOG FORM UPDATES & ADDITIONS BY BARBARA BRACKMAN

Monday, January 7, 2019

Farmer's Wife---How many blocks ever made?


Did anyone ever make this block?
This is a question pattern historian Cuesta Benberry and I used to ask each other. Some designs seem so obscure that we were thrilled to come across an actual quilt in the pattern. 

I don't recall ever seeing this one made into a quilt, however.

It's BlockBase #4088
Best known as Farmer's Wife.

It's interesting but hard to construct, and as you might
guess by the seam lines, it's filed in BlockBase under Miscellaneous. I looked at
it as a pieced block.

I recently found the original source. In 1912 the Farmer's Wife from St. Paul, Minnesota  showed a sketch of "A New Quilt Pattern" by Mrs. H. L Miller. This pattern was designed expressly for this magazine from which it takes its name." The Farmer's Wife  would send you a pattern for a dime.

I was pleased to find the source of the pattern and the name. The periodical published many quilt patterns over the years.

I squared up the sketch but it still looks obscure, probably all appliqued.

Eveline Foland drew a variation for the Kansas City Star and her pattern, all appliqued, does look do-able.

Carlie Sexton offered a pattern at the same time. She
seems to have made up at least one block.

Have you ever seen a vintage block or quilt in the pattern?

Recently Sue Daley re-drew it and actually stitched a block!

Sue sells plastic templates for a pieced version.
https://www.suedaleyblog.com/its-a-classic-kinda-day-farmers-wife/

Or print it out in BlockBase any size. Here's a sheet with an 8" pattern.


UPDATE: Margaret wrote me a note telling me Jen Kingwell has done a whole quilt, also sells the pattern and templates.



3 comments:

  1. I've never seen an antique version and I'm guessing they didn't make many dimes on this one.

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  2. Wow, an amazing block. I can't imagine many full size quilts were made using this as a one block quilt. Thank you for the interesting blocks and the research into their history.

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