Have you heard of a Yo-Yo Quilt? Apparently these were popular in the 1920s and 1930s. They are made by taking 4" fabric circles and stitching them into a circle puff and then piecing all of the circle puffs together.
I looked on the internet and some of the antique Yo-Yo quilts (still in good condition) are selling for 5-600 dollars. Yikes! Well, my point in sharing this is that they are beautiful and I was excited to learn my grandmother's secret.
(this photo is an internet example, not my grandma's quilt, although very similar)I already knit and crochet like both of my grandmothers were known to do, and I've attempted quilting but just never enjoyed how much space and time it took up. See, with crocheting I can do it in the car, I can do it while watching TV, I can do it while sitting around talking with friends. Quilting...its much bigger and not so travel friendly...so I thought...the Yo-Yo quilt technique, however, allows you to make all the pieces by hand (so maybe while riding in the car) and then you piece it together. I think the piecing together used to be intended as a social project hence you needed enough for everyone to do. By social, I mean that all the family's women could sit around and piece after a family dinner and at the end of the night you'd have a quilt. Doesn't that sound efficient? Anyone want to help make a yo-yo?
2 comments:
How cool, what a great legacy...
that's cool that yall found those. a yo-yo pillow has been on my list to make... I just need to accumulate enough scraps first. I have a pile of little hexagons on my nightstand that I've been paper piecing while we watch TV or while Craig reads. I'm catching up on blogs & emails since Craig's parents have been visiting this week. I'm waiting for Zoe to stop crying before I try to go to sleep. I'd hate to lie down and have to get right back up again :(
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