300 Quilts · EPP · Quilt Finish

Community • Quilt Finish: North Country Patchwork

This is a quilter’s visual paradise: triangles, circles, squares, bits-and-pieces; it’s the Cosmati pavement in Westminster Cathedral, which got a lot of press recently with the coronation of King Charles.

And this is an entirely different view of pieces and fragments and color. These two images remind me of something I’ve been thinking about for a while: the concept and idea of Community. Obviously these two art pieces present different depictions of together, of belonging, of interacting: ordered or overlaid; yet as a whole, the colors and shapes are part of a whole.

The idea of community has many parts, but “first is the territorial and geographical notion of community—neighborhood, town, city. The second is ‘relational,” concerned with “quality of character of human relationship, without reference to location”….[T]he two usages are not mutually exclusive, although….[and often] modern society develops community around interests and skills more than around locality” (from here).

I always imagined community as being a local sort of thing. Quilt Village de Provence, an original quilt made by Frédérique, is a lovely and perfect depiction of that: a beautiful central sun lighting all the town. Her circular quilting reinforces this idea: we are all together in a great, broad and enveloping circle. (She granted me permission to share this.)

Some of this thinking was triggered by the recent events in my own life: of the passing away of my mother, a breaking of one of my most central relationships. I found myself deep in mourning and all its attendant ills and challenges, yet found a community of women who had gone through something similar, and they buoyed me up. I loved the comment by Tina on the last post, who recommended patience with the process, reminding me that “It takes as long as it takes.” So community, in this sense, was like the second definition, above: “interests and skills more than around locality.”

Recently, I volunteered to serve as a website admin/blog poster for one of our local quilt guilds. In diving in to this, I discovered many tightly bound communities in this larger whole, some accepting of a newbie, yet other groups resistant, with the gates shuttered and the drawbridge up. It was an interesting experience and I was surprised by how fiercely some guarded their particular little fiefdom. Community is not new to me; I’ve been a classroom teacher. I’ve been a Guild teacher. I’ve taught in quilt shops. I’ve been a part of a worldwide church community my whole life, and worked locally within that, coming to love friends and neighbors — thankful for those who accepted me with a large measure of grace and patience — yet I also figured out who was prickly and deserved a wide margin. This guild experience was no exception.

I have also loved having a larger quilting community due to social media, making many friendships even though we lived far away from each other. This is not a new concept to any of you. But the final thoughts about people and connections are because of this quilt. It’s my version of an antique quilt from another community, far far away:

Found on Instagram, I loved the red patches floating on the creamy background of this quilt from the North Country of England, perhaps where my great-grandmother was from? I don’t know, but I like thinking that she may have made something like this, so many many miles and years ago.

In 2019, my young granddaughter Dani played with it in her living room, helping me lay out the center. I have carried this with me on trips, and have taken this quilt to my local quilt guild meetings, ready for it to come to its completion, bridging my connection with this young girl to the older British/American quilter sitting next to me, telling me about her connection to King Charles via her church parish from when she was a girl the same age as my Dani.

At the heart of it is this: I cannot live without my community. It’s been a hard slog to feel easy again in a crowd post-Covid, their faces close to mine as I listen to them, share their joys, carry their sorrows. Loneliness has dogged a lot of us, and we are rebuilding. I am admittedly less patient with those who willfully bar the gates to friendship, but I try to offer them a measure of grace and move on, looking for others who want to form connections.

In a paper by McMillan and Chavis, they define a “Sense of community [as] a feeling that members have of belonging, a feeling that members matter to one another and to the group, and a shared faith that members’ needs will be met through their commitment to be together” (from here). This idea keeps me going, keeps me making friends (and quilts), and helps me find acceptance, no matter whether we are from the North Country or South Country. No matter what slice of life we are from — old or young, happy or cranky, hesitant or willing — I hope we find community.

Other posts about North Country Patchwork Quilt:

EPPing again with French General (and the printouts for the papers to make this)
Do You Tweet?
First Monday Quilt (where I thought it would only take me two years to finish. Haha.)

Yes, it plays nicely in the kitchen. Quilting by Jen of Sew-Mazing Quilting. I love any version of Baptist Fan!

All but the final border was sewn by hand.

The reverse, a combination of two lengths of fabric. The right side is the same that’s on my sister’s quilt, New Journeys, made from French General fabrics, some years ago. Thank you goes to my wonderful quilt-holding husband.
This is Quilt #277 on my Quilt Index • 66″ x 86.”


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15 thoughts on “Community • Quilt Finish: North Country Patchwork

  1. Love the texture and both subtle and bold colors in your quilt, Elizabeth. And yes, grieving is a process.. I think it’s especially difficult to lose your mom. Mine has been gone over thirty years, and every once in awhile, the grief still hits me.

  2. What a beautiful quilt, Elizabeth!! I love everything about it – pattern, colors, and the Baptist fan quilting. It really speaks to my “traditional” heart😊, yet seems to have a modern vibe about it, too. Perfect in your kitchen, but don’t know how much time it will spend there!😊. Your comments about community are spot on – the quilting community is one of the major reasons I’m passionate about making quilts and I cherish the many friends and connections made there. Thanks for your eloquence on the topic!

  3. The quilt is lovely. I don’t particularly care for blue in my quilts, but French General wins me over every time. I don’t really have time for paper piecing right now but maybe in a few years when my life gets less hectic. That may be a pipe dream! LOL

  4. What a beautiful quilt this is! you amaze me with all your wonderful completions of so many quilts and patterns that you design. Thanks for sharing all this beauty here.
    As usual your post makes me think a bit deeper, that is a good thing, even when sometimes a bit uncomfortable. I too have had some difficulty getting used to group settings again since Covid, although they have never been a real comfort zone. The word community just evokes a feeling of closeness, hope and love to me…all things which are harder to come by these days.

  5. I think my mind has become entirely quilt centric. At first glimpse I thought the floor was an already made quilt, and I tapped on the Denise Driscoll link hoping to look at fabric for sale. Thanks for the fix!
    Signed,
    A Quilt Junkie

  6. I admire your patience for EPP. You always do such a lovely job on it too. I think it belongs as an island cover! The kitchen would always be warm. lol. It’s looking like it may be the only warmth we get his summer.

  7. What a beautiful and inspiring quilt. In a way it represents your thoughts on community. The inner area being those you are closest to. The blue ring those that surround and support. The outer those at a distance but still with things in common. All tied together by the red that is you. Spread out over many communities.

  8. Congratulations on the completion of a time-consuming quilt. I love seeing the French General fabric you put on my quilt.I call it my “magic quilt” because I am wrapped in your love when I fall asleep.

  9. I know exactly what you mean about prickly people with their drawbridges up. I’m so glad for the connections I make, whether online or in person, and I think our country and our world would be the better if we all had more connection and a bigger sense of community. Beautifully written and a lovely quilt. I am grateful to know you!

  10. Amen. Beautiful loving quilt and in depth comments to help us each reach a little deeper.
    Blessings, Dawn

  11. Oh be still my heart. I absolutely adore it, as I’m sure you knew I would! ❤️🤍💙

    My grandmother has been gone 40+ years and rarely does a day go by that I don’t think about her. Mostly a comfort, but still sometimes after all these years some pain. Testament, I think to our mutual devotion. XO

  12. Your quilt is just lovely. I enjoyed reading your thoughts on community. I know personally I have really pulled back and I know that’s not a good thing for me. But I’m working at getting out more and keeping the drawbridge down.

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