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Monday, July 23, 2018

Checkerboard Trees

Pictorial tree designs were popular after 1880 or so.
But the tree tops are usually pieced of triangles.

Checkerboard tree tops are a subcategory.

"Little Beach Tree" 
(I think she meant Beech tree)

The Ladies's Art Company first offered a pattern about 1890.


The Ladies's Art sold several interesting tree designs.

Ruby McKim drew a pattern for the Kansas City Star
in the late 1920s...

which may have been the inspiration for the sampler block
with name embroidered. It's constructed as a four patch.

A variation.




Carrie Hall's version from the Spencer Museum collection

More checkerboard trees from BlockBase


Dolores Hinson designed this one for her book Quilters Companion
and called it Tree of Temptation. The four patch squares are apples.

Different construction from Carrie Hall's book. She called it
Tree of Temptation---red squares are apples. See pattern below.

Hall left just a few quilts and one of them was inspired by a newspaper design to
celebrate the 200th anniversary of George Washington's birth.

1932, Lydia LeBaron Walker
This version is also an apple tree, the symbol of the truthful first President
who is supposed to have said "I cannot tell a lie."

Washington Bi-Centennial Quilt by Carrie Hall, 1932
Spencer Museum of Art.

 BlockBase measurements for a 16" block for Hall's Tree of Temptation.

Use green and white polka dots and you have Apple Blossoms

1 comment:

  1. I used one similar to this as the center for a round robin, as yet unfinished and stowed away somewhere. Need to find it and finish it with a border, I think that is all that is needed.

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