Don't settle for boring fillings when using your CRIMPiT, we have 10 tasty filling ideas to get you started.
DCMontreal is a Montreal writer born and raised who likes to establish balance and juxtapositions; a bit of this and a bit of that, a dash of Yin and a soupçon of Yang, some Peaks and Freans and ma…
Photo from an online auction A few weeks ago one of the social media quilt groups discussed the price of quilting over the years. Many remember their mothers and grandmothers quilting for pay and some of them have done it themselves. Comments in that thread below, a form of oral history (digital oral history?) North Carolina, 1935 Library of Congress About 1900 The pictures have no real connection to the stories but certainly offer history in themselves. Jean recalled: "My great grandmother quilted for other people in the 1930s to be able to pay for rent and groceries. I dimly remember overhearing in my childhood my mother saying she was paid 50 cents per spool of thread used. Does this seem like a reasonable amount for the times? That would mean that if she used 2 spools to quilt a top she was paid $1.00. ....She lived in a small rural Kentucky town, and I’m sure her clients would have been from the same county." Missouri, 1960s There was discussion about the charge of 50 cents per spool. Jean's great-grandmother lived in a small town during the Depression so people elsewhere may have paid more. Hazel: "My grandmother took in quilt tops... I think it was probably 50 cents a spool in the 1930/40s. She lived in Salem, Iowa." Oregon, About 1900 Diane's first thought: "I would have used little spools." Charging by the spool was the classic price determinant. Laura L: "The smaller and closer together the quilting the larger the amount of thread and pay." Spools varied in how much thread was wound around them. The Best Cord 40-weight above had 200 yards per spool. Marie Webster of Indiana in her 1915 book Quilts gave some information: "A spool of cotton thread, such as is found in every dry-goods store, averaging two hundred yards to the spool, is the universal measure. The price charged is more a matter of locality than excellence of workmanship. [In the past] one dollar per spool was the usual price paid..." She apparently was paying $5 a spool in Indiana in the teens. (Seems quite inflationary!) New York City, 1940s-'50s New York Public Library The $1 a spool price seems to have become the standard quoted in books and magazine articles in the mid-20th-century, probably based on Webster's book, the standard for quilt history for many years. Bunny looked it up: "Thread cost and sizes from '30s = 10c per spool; 125 yds per spool." 1948 Anna Huber Good Some readers remembered hand quilting themselves for pay. Diane "did hand quilting for people up until the late 90's. I charged .50/yd of thread , I measured a yard and threaded the needle. I know you shouldn't have that much on a needle, but it made it easy to keep track and it worked for me." Montana, 1961 Laura "quilted with a church group in the 80's and we charged so much for the first spool then by the yard after that. We measured out yards of thread and kept track. With the yard on the needle we went to the half on the first stitch, then quilted from each end of the thread. My son (a toddler) used to come and play under the quilt frame." Laura S. "I remember church groups charging by the spool and that was in the 1990s. I think it was $5 per spool but I don't know the size of the spool." About 1970 Quilters also charged a flat rate per quilt, which is what I recall when I had hand quilters finish the old tops I bought in thrift stores in the 1970s. "My mom was machine quilting in the '50s-70s and only charged $5 a quilt." Dianna: "My granny was paid $5 per quilt for hand quilting." Gail: " I remember paying $20 to have a queen-size quilt quilted back in the early 70's. Quilter charged $18 but my husband gave her $20, being 'generous'." California Migrant Camp, Late 1930s Library of Congress Diana: "My mom hand quilted for people She charged $20 for a double bed size quilt....she did such beautiful hand work. Tiny stitches." Marji still hand quilts with a charity group. Like many long-arm quilters they calculate square footage: "We have a quilting bee at the Gilbert [Arizona] Historical museum. We charge by the square foot. All quilts are hand quilted by wonderful quilters who volunteer their time. $7 a square foot." Texas, 1960s? And Virginia explains a new pricing system: "My Mom quilts with a church group. They charge $50 to put the quilt in the frame and then charge by the number of quilters per day x the number of days worked (sorry but I don't know what figure they are currently using). I know that Mom was fussing about how high the bill was getting on a quilt with a lot of quilting until I pointed out that they were still way less than what a longarmer would charge." New York, New York Public Library, 1970s? The Busy Bees at the Methodist Church Texas, 2012 Following this thread tomorrow: We'll continue looking at prices for quilting using published accounts.
.22 long rifle, smallbore target rifle was introduced in 1954 by O. F. Moss-berg amp Sons, Inc. Weighing only 8 lbs., it is for those who prefer a
In this memoir, Xat'sull chief Bev Sellars describes the cruelty directed at students who spent 10 months a year at St. Joseph's Mission Residential School.
Visit the post for more.
Antique French Lace Making Table Loom With Original Wooden Bobbins, c1870.
Several summers ago, as I sat by the peaceful Magothy River, I watched someone as they were knitting a very pretty shawl. Because it didn'...
Pillow maker Rebecca Vizard transforms her rural Louisiana estate with funky French Quarter flair.
Gnocchi Carbonara - easy dinner recipe with soft gnocchi, bacon and cheese.
The Airplane That Landed With 92 Skeletons On Board | airplane, Skeleton
Laundry can be boring, but your laundry room doesn't have to be. Ideas to optimize your laundry room style, layout, decor, organization, and DIY.
Before: The ugly (but practical) metal and chipboard shelves that house all of my vintage fabrics up in my work studio, needed a little reorganisation... After: I trimmed the front edges of the shelves with some fabric ruffles and lace to disguise the frames a little. And I've tried to organise all of my floral fabrics to colour as far as possible. (photos from my Instagram page) French checks and tickings here... And the old shop counter cigar display cabinet, safely stores away all of my tiniest scraps of preciousness...(a good promotion from cigars to fabric loveliness, I think? ;-)) French linen sheets and lace panels to the left and hand embroidered linens to the right. Cutter quilts above and vintage velvets below them. And heaps of soft woollen Fairisles. Smaller pieces of lace here, with two little Victorian dolls patiently awaiting their fabricy makeovers. I'm allowing any of this lot piled on my workbench to go (takes deep breaths and tells self it's not good to hoard too much!) - To be sold-off to a textile dealer friend of mine if she's in need of any of it (will find out at the end of the week)...The rest will be for sale on my stall at the South Molton Flea Market on Feb 14th. All shipshape at last, with my most favouritest fabrics safely stowed away ready to use in their next incarnation...I'm just waiting for inspiration to hit now... Meanwhile, a colourful gaggle of fairy folk in my etsy store are eagerly awaiting adoption. Enjoy the rest of your week, Niki x
Specificaties Meer informatie Artikelnummer 0007.02381 Merk Algemeen Ook al zitten er meerdere aantallen in een verpakking. Soms kiezen wij ervoor om het toch per stuk te verkopen. Hier kunt u lezen of u dit artikel per volle verpakking of per stuk kunt kopen. Afname per 1 stuk leverancierartikelnr 11.0476 EAN 99947611301963