From Deseret News archives:
A stitch in time Applique quilting
Store owner says technique 'is the love of my heart'
However, for Jeanette White, co-owner of Piper's Quilts & Comforts in Sugar House, the art of quiltmaking is very much alive. White has a passion for it and is seeking to bring back what is fast becoming a lost art.
White specializes in a quilting technique called applique or applied fabric design, which can be done by hand or machine. She says many quilting stores are terrified of it, because they don't have anyone who specializes in it.
One of the more common quilting trends today is piecing, or making geometric fabric designs with pieces of material. However, White still prefers applique.
"Applique is the love of my heart. I've been doing it for a long time," she said. "Teaching applique is what really sets us apart and makes us different from other quilting stores in the valley."
"We're much more interested in teaching people how to make quilts than to sell them. We do sell them, but that's not our primary goal," Hamilton said.
For example, one of the quilts displayed in the store, located at 1944 S. 1100 East, is called Botanica. It is made up of 12 blocks. Each 24-inch-square block has a different floral design, made with fine-hand applique. Each month Piper's features a block of the month and provides a kit with all the necessary materials to complete it and a class to work on it.
By the end of the year, those taking the class will have made an heirloom-quality quilt without a lot of headache or expense. Kits can be purchased separately for $20 each or all at once for $192.
White refuses to tell her customers or class members that something is beyond their skill level.
"I don't like to tell people that quiltmaking is hard, because it's not or that something is too difficult for them," she said.
Comments
- Y. scientists rip lawmakers on climate 3:21 p.m.
- Nature's Sunshine lawsuit settled 3:19 p.m.
- Hall, Cougars crush Cowboys 2:57 p.m.
- Pitt beats Syracuse 37-10 2:43 p.m.
- No. 24 Wisconsin holds off Indiana 2:41 p.m.
- Shipley's record day leads Texas 2:39 p.m.
- No. 16 Miami rolls past Virginia 2:36 p.m.
- Northwestern upsets Iowa 17-10 2:34 p.m.
- Family, friends remember nephew 1:54 p.m.
- Online math adds up to a lot of fun 11:57 a.m.
- Report details Prop 8 aftermath
410 - Gay advocates trek to LDS office
201 - Dirk does dirty work in Dallas
190 - Letters: Care not a right
184 - Lobo suspended
169 - Speed has never been BYU's game
136 - Jazz stumble in fourth quarter
106 - RSL rallies to advance
102 - Prep football: San Juan vs. S. Sevier
100 - Thousands protest health bill
98
Why do so many people live so close to refineries in Utah and elsewhere?
NASA's Stardust probe continues to bring new knowledge about the nature...
We need reform. Matheson acknowledges that. We will get there in the final bill.
UHSAA needs to take a hike....I am sick of these brackets that pit the best...
Hey Utes, time to step up and admit it. BYU crushed Wyoming, the team you...
This is an answer to many years of prayer, faith and hard work for the LDS in...
I will be going to this temple as soon as it opens.
if the brackets rotate every year, how is it that they have played in the...
Cool site, but a sperm only contains one (for a boy) or two (for a girl) X...
Next football season, the BYU athletic adminstration and football coaches...
So you are saying that BYU should have scored the first touch down then do to...
I must say that this has been the best year to be enjoying as a Senior....



You can be the first to comment on this story.