08.02.11 = Quilted with love

Even in this crazy heat, somehow my quilts feel light and cool, and strangely, in the winter, they feel heavy and warm.  How is that possible?  I was thinking about this at 3:40 this morning when I couldn’t sleep.  Is it the cotton material?  Is it the weight of the fabric?  Does it have something to do with the quilting? Or is it because they are all little squares? What?   As I tossed and turned the question over in my semiconscious mind, I quickly dozed back off, no closer to solving the scientific make up and physics of my quilt.  I mostly just felt the love that was stitched in every square and a big hug from my grandmother.  

“Carefully cut pieces of our lives, held together by a common thread; that’s quilted love.” Kristan Dunlap
08.02.11 = Quilted with love

Even in this crazy heat, somehow my quilts feel light and cool, and strangely, in the winter, they feel heavy and warm.  How is that possible?  I was thinking about this at 3:40 this morning when I couldn’t sleep.  Is it the cotton material?  Is it the weight of the fabric?  Does it have something to do with the quilting? Or is it because they are all little squares? What?   As I tossed and turned the question over in my semiconscious mind, I quickly dozed back off, no closer to solving the scientific make up and physics of my quilt.  I mostly just felt the love that was stitched in every square and a big hug from my grandmother.  

“Carefully cut pieces of our lives, held together by a common thread; that’s quilted love.” Kristan Dunlap
10.19.10 = Quilts

This is the time of the year when I love to open the windows and let all the cool air in and then snuggle under my favorite quilts; the quilts that my grandmother made.  It brings back a flood of memories of her and the country house.  A modest home full of love, great conversation, wonderful food and a lot of common sense, or “horse sense” as she would call it.  Hanging the quilts on the line is something she always did.  Come to think of it, I don’t think she had a dryer until much later.  I remember her telling me that when the wind blew, it picked up all the smells from around the yard and the quilt would catch it and keep it.  Then you could smell all the flowers from the yard, the corn in the field and trees from the grove, all in your quilt as you slept at night.  It’s true, you can smell all of it. But what I smell when I breath deep is her, and all the love she put into each square. It’s like getting a big hug from her all over again. 

Carefully cut pieces of our lives, held together by a common thread; Love
08.02.11 = Quilted with love

Even in this crazy heat, somehow my quilts feel light and cool, and strangely, in the winter, they feel heavy and warm. How is that possible? I was thinking about this at 3:40 this morning when I couldn’t sleep. Is it the cotton material? Is it the weight of the fabric? Does it have something to do with the quilting? Or is it because they are all little squares? What? As I tossed and turned the question over in my semiconscious mind, I quickly dozed back off, no closer to solving the scientific make up and physics of my quilt. I mostly just felt the love that was stitched in every square and a big hug from my grandmother.

“Carefully cut pieces of our lives, held together by a common thread; that’s quilted love.” Kristan Dunlap
08.02.11 = Quilted with love

Even in this crazy heat, somehow my quilts feel light and cool, and strangely, in the winter, they feel heavy and warm.  How is that possible?  I was thinking about this at 3:40 this morning when I couldn’t sleep.  Is it the cotton material?  Is it the weight of the fabric?  Does it have something to do with the quilting? Or is it because they are all little squares? What?   As I tossed and turned the question over in my semiconscious mind, I quickly dozed back off, no closer to solving the scientific make up and physics of my quilt.  I mostly just felt the love that was stitched in every square and a big hug from my grandmother.  

“Carefully cut pieces of our lives, held together by a common thread; that’s quilted love.” Kristan Dunlap
08.02.11 = Quilted with love

Even in this crazy heat, somehow my quilts feel light and cool, and strangely, in the winter, they feel heavy and warm. How is that possible? I was thinking about this at 3:40 this morning when I couldn’t sleep. Is it the cotton material? Is it the weight of the fabric? Does it have something to do with the quilting? Or is it because they are all little squares? What? As I tossed and turned the question over in my semiconscious mind, I quickly dozed back off, no closer to solving the scientific make up and physics of my quilt. I mostly just felt the love that was stitched in every square and a big hug from my grandmother.

“Carefully cut pieces of our lives, held together by a common thread; that’s quilted love.” Kristan Dunlap
See photo in original gallery.