
11 years ago Meredith had some devestating news. Her second son Robert, 11 at the time, was diagnosed with diabetes. Rob had to be taken to the Adelaide Children's Hospital to stabilse his condition. It was the start of many hospital visits. I felt so useless, being so far away, and unable at that time to leave my own family to go and help. I knew Meredith needed something to occupy her mind and her hands, and I came up with the idea of kitting up the hexagon quilt for her, so she could make a start on her quilt in the hospital, and then hunt down the rest of the fabrics over the coming months.
I cut out enough hexagons for about 7 of the rosettes, and strips of any fabric that I though she could use in the others, and sent it off to her. Then I began my own quilt, so that we were making a current day pair of quilts too.
I worked on this every year at Wimbledon time, sitting up late into the night with my stacks of pieces, industriously basting the material to the paper hexagons, then whip-stitching them together; all very English. It was a lot of fun, and I worked on it for more than four years, until it was finally pieced. Towards the end, when I had trouble finding anything at all that I could use to approximate the old fabrics, I had to use whatever I could. This was before the Stash came into existence!
It was so monstrously big! I hadn't worked out the final measurement when using a 1" hexagon, and the final measurements are 98" x 86". I was slightly appalled at the size, and thought it had grown to be a monstrosity, too big to fit any bed we owned; it was christened the Red Elephant.
Do Americans have White Elephants? It's an English thing; a White Elephant was anything that was more trouble than it was worth, or no use to the owner. White Elephant stalls at Fairs sell donated junk and household objects that no-one wants any more. It's any object that is out of place or not wanted or unsuitable. And my quilt was definitely unsuitable. But Red...



In time we bought a bigger bed, with one of those very thick mattresses, and a large quilt became a necessity. Instead of this quilt being an embarrassment, it's the only one I've finished that actually fits the new bed. It has lived there ever since I took the final stitches in the binding 2 years ago, and every day when I make the bed I run my hand over the rosettes and smile at the memories.
Great memories. Great Quilt. we all need at least one humungous quilt in our lives. That elephant backing fabric reminds me of some cotton prints I got from Jim Thompson's Silk shop in Bangkok about 3 years ago.
ReplyDeleteThe story of this quilt is moving ant it is absolutely wonderful. What a patience !
ReplyDeleteThis is a great quilt. And I understand you love it. Grandmothers flowergarden is a beautiful pattern where you can use all of your scraps.
ReplyDeleteTo answer your question, yes we have white elephants too... As a matter of fact, my guild has a white elephant sale every year in October or November and the proceeds go to the church where we meet for their Thanksgiving charity baskets.
ReplyDeleteLovely quilt - great back!
What a lovely quilt, & a lovely story to go with it. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteSo nice to get your comment on my blog....and then to find you were a quilter too---and what a quilter. Your work is beautiful....and a tennis fan...I'll definitely be back.
ReplyDeleteI grew up going to a great antique store in the mountains called The White Elephant...it used to be an inn of the same name. It still had the claw foot tubs in all the bathrooms. One of my favorite places. Thanks for sharing your elephant.
ReplyDeleteWent snooping through you archives...ha! Love the billy jar idea, and your log cabins are gorgeous. We call a "mistake" such as the one on your log cabin quilt, a creative design option! I drew encouragement from the story of your Dad. Made me feel much better about all my unfinished symphonies...
ReplyDelete