Decorating with Quilts
Posted: Monday, February 21, 2005
by lorien1973
Online Discount Mart Home & Garden Decor
Bring your antique quilts out of the cedar chest and into the light and you will be doing them, and your room décor, a big favor. Few decorative items in your collection are more versatile.
Of course, the most obvious spot to display grandma’s handiwork is on a bed. Don’t worry about how your quilt measures up against today’s standardized bedspread sizes. Antique quilts are as individual in size and design as the women and men who made them. Especially in patchwork quilts, when the quilter ran out of fabric to use, the quilt was done! Use dust ruffles or plain bedspreads to make sure your bed is fully “dressed", and let the quilt lay on top of the bed however it may. If you have a large bed, and a smaller quilt, choose a bedspread with a bit of texture in a complimentary color, and fold the quilt across the foot of the bed. You will get the visual impact of the quilt, but keep the look of the bed in proportion.
Have a few family quilts that have some design interest, but are not exactly in the category of fine art? Or perhaps you have some from mom’s cedar chest or a local estate sale that are too pretty to stay in the closet, but too damaged to be the focal point of a room? Quilts like these are terrific when folded neatly and stacked on an open shelf, in a glass front cabinet, or on a blanket chest. Damaged quilts can also be folded so the worst areas don’t show and displayed 3-5 at a time on a multi-level quilt rack. Play around here, and re-arrange the stack until you are happy with how it looks as a whole place colors and textures next to each other in the way that is most pleasing to your eye. The good news with this system is, when you want to make a change, you can do it with little effort. Change the stack around, change its location, exchange a quilt in the stack for the one on the bed, you can get a fresh look for your room with a minimum of time and expense.
Sometimes, quilts that are damaged beyond salvation as a whole have a stable section that can be cut out and used to make pillows or table runners. I love the idea of part of a quilt living on in usefulness after the rest of it has gone, and I suspect the original makers, many of whom were thrifty as well as artistic, would get some joy out of that idea as well. But, please, only cut up quilts that are well beyond repair. Once each of these unique treasures is cut, it is lost to us forever. But with a little thought, we can enjoy our antique quilts as decorative items, while also preserving them to pass on to future generations to appreciate.
By Mary Beth Temple
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