Apple Pies To Sleep Under
Sewing a pie cooling quilt, including designs, materials, pattern, diagrams.
by SUSAN BENNETT GALLAGHER
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GEOMETRIC QUILT PATTERNS are those that
use regular geometric elements—squares, rectangles
and triangles—in some consistent overall
organization. In the long history of geometric quilt
designs the individual variations are too numerous to
count. But certain families of patterns can be identified.
For example, the Log Cabin family uses long strips to make
various types of blocks. Courthouse Steps, Windmill Blades
and Pineapples are members of this group.
The Apple Pie quilt belongs to a family in which each block
contains a central rotated square. This pattern has some
similarities to the Shoofly Pie pattern of Amish quilters.
Central rotated squares are flanked by triangles and
strips. The corners of the strips are broken down into
little triangles. These tiny triangles are the "flies" that
buzz around each pie.
Early quilts were usually done in contrasting prints, most
often in a white and dark-blue calico print. Printed cloth
was a manufactured good, not always easy to get and
certainly not available in the rainbow of shades and
patterns offered in stores today. A bolt or two, bought
once a year, would be used for that year's dresses, shirts,
quilts and curtains.
A limit of two colors was not a hardship for pioneer
quilters. Their quilts are as rich and interesting as some
of the later ones, which exploit a wider palette.
The quilt stitching for this piece superimposes four
concentric circles over the squares. The circles are one
inch apart. The first circle fits just inside the central
rotated square, and the successive ones cross through the
strips and triangles.
From Childhood Dreams: A Book of Crib Quilt Projects, by
Susan Bennett Gallagher, copyright © 1989 by Susan
Bennett Gallagher, $12.95 paperback. Reprinted by
permission of Sterling Publishing Co., Inc., New York, NY.