Cathedral Window Quilts. Lynne Edwards
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CATHEDRAL WINDOW QUILTS
LYNNE EDWARDS
THE CLASSIC FOLDED TECHNIQUE AND A WEALTH OF VARIATIONS
CONTENTS
Part 1 Classic Cathedral Window
Cathedral Window: Secret Garden
Cathedral Window: Twisted Windows
Cathedral Window: Using Rectangles
One-square Folded Cathedral Window
Two-shade Folded Cathedral Window
Dedications
This book is dedicated to the memory of Anna Wilson, a wonderful embroiderer and teacher who first introduced me to Cathedral Window many years ago and never told me it was always done with scraps and calico and that it could be difficult, so I flew with it right from the start.
Also to the memory of Tess Simpson and Marian Edwards, two of my Wednesday East Bergholt girls, and also Val Wakefield a Monday girl, all of whom are much missed by us all.
To my family, now expanded to include daughter-in-law Vicky and the Cowan family, who all feel as though they have been part of the family for ever.
And finally, to all those quilters who have been kind or polite enough to ask for this book on my favourite technique and especially to Michael Sarjent from the Home Workshop who has nagged me for years to do it. At last, Michael, at last…
Introduction
Cathedral Window is a traditional patchwork technique, usually interpreted in old quilts as rows of folded squares of cream calico with a random arrangement of patterned fabric squares in the windows. It uses about four times its area in the folded squares, so is very greedy of fabric and makes a heavy quilt. Because I use a variety of fabrics and colours for both the folded squares and the overlying windows, I tend to make smaller pieces such as wall hangings, where the subtlety of the designs can be best appreciated.
The first documented evidence of the Cathedral Window design used in a quilt appeared at the Chicago World’s Fair in the United States in 1933. Possibly its subsequent popularity in the US was partly due to the fact that it needed no backing or borders, and during those Depression years the only fabric most quilters had was a pile of plain cream-coloured corn sacks, which could make the folded squares and a few scraps of coloured fabric which made the windows.
Evidence of Cathedral Window patchwork has been seen more recently in China and Korea, where the design seems to go back several centuries. Aware of my interest in Cathedral Windows, many people have sent me samples and information. Anne Roberts from Sussex has a modern baby carrier that she bought in China which was made using the Cathedral Window design. She also found illustrations in a book on Chinese costume that showed the pattern. Known as the ‘coin’ pattern, it was a symbol of prosperity and was believed to ward off evil.
A piece of traditional Cathedral Window from the United States made around 1960, given to me by Susan Harvey from Jersey.
Mandy Lovick started this quilt in 2003 while on holiday. After leaving London for Devon in 2004, their belongings were put into storage, including Mandy’s sewing machine and fabric stash, so the Cathedral Windows work was re-started while they lived with friends and house hunted. The new home took up much of Mandy’s time, so she carried on Cathedral-windowing, and one day realized she had enough for a single quilt – and here it is.
Angela Chisholm from Edinburgh sent me extracts from a catalogue that accompanied a 1990 exhibition of Korean wrapping cloths. These are decorative cloths called potaji, used in Korea since the 15th century, which are used for wrapping, carrying or covering many objects. The cloths often include patchwork and a technique called ciatamani, which is what we know as Cathedral Window. A photograph in the catalogue shows a detail of one of these cloths, where the method of stitching back the curve – the spaced backstitch – is the same one that I use. With these two examples of a long tradition of the technique in the East, I wonder whether returning missionaries could have brought it back to the United States or England early in the 20th century. Most people’s idea of Cathedral Window is this traditional one, as can be seen in the little block from Susan Harvey shown on page 4. It is also used wonderfully in Mandy Lovick’s bed quilt (see previous page), where a whole collection of scraps begged from friends has been used for the windows and the design framed with a strong blue border strip.
A detail from my Candyfloss wall hanging (see page 74), a colourful combination of square sand rectangular Cathedral Window blocks in gorgeous