Kentucky Quilts and Their Makers

by Mary Washington Clarke

Hardcover, 1993

Status

Available

Publication

The University Press of Kentucky (1993), Hardcover, 136 pages

Description

Kentucky's contribution to the perennially popular American craft of quiltmaking is a rich and varied one. Mary Clarke examines here the state of the craft in Kentucky and finds it as lively today as it was 150 years ago. Like a fingerprint, every Kentucky quilt differs from all others in some respects, whether it is an original creation or a variation of one of the traditional patterns long popular in the United States. And many Kentucky quilts reveal much about the individual maker -- her disposition, taste, and lifestyle, the familiar objects that bring joy to her daily life, and her response to events beyond the confines of family and home. Taken as a whole, Kentucky quilts and quilt names reflect the history of the Commonwealth, at every turn showing the intermingling of old and new in the grassroots continuity of an ancient craft that responds to fads and fashions by absorbing and refining them.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member thornton37814
This older book tells the story of quilts made mostly although not entirely by women in the state of Kentucky. It was written for the 1976 Bicentennial and mainly features quilts in the Kentucky Museum. A few plates are in color, but most illustrations are in black and white. Some information
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seemed to be repeated more often than necessary in the course of the book, but overall, it gave a good overview. Most of today's readers are more aware of the National Museum of Quilts, located in Paducah, but that museum opened in 1991--years after this book's publication. I'd love to see an updated version of this with more full color illustrations included.
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Language

Physical description

136 p.; 9.06 inches

ISBN

0813100968 / 9780813100968

Local notes

Art Theory/History Criticism
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