Saturday, May 3, 2014

The Wedding Gown Quilt

I promised to post about this project, and I thought to show all the steps along the way! There are unknowns going into such a process, sometimes there are challenges that make changes unavoidable.
Here is the vintage gown, circa 1960……… 
It was beautiful, silk, with tiny covered buttons in back and on the sleeves and lace down the front of the bodice and skirt with a built in train. Andrea's Mother must have been a petite lady judging by the gown, very small sleeves and a 22" waist.
The first step was to remove the skirt from the bodice so I could get an idea of how much useable fabric we could harvest. The gown was not cleaned before storing, so I will need to clean the fabric before attempting construction, but it may in the long run have been better not to have dry cleaning fluid in those delicate fibers all these years. Contrary to popular understanding dry cleaning is extremely harsh and much too severe for many fabrics especially vintage and antique items. I took a small piece and laundered it gently in a Biz solution, that's the product my professional quilt appraiser Karen Housner recommends. Karen is a quilt historian, lecturer and teacher and collector of vintage and antique quilts so I trust her advice implicitly.
This is the piece after laundering and pressing, it came out very well so I will need to treat the remainder of the gown fabric the same way. After deliberating over whether to launder before or after cutting the blocks I think it may be easier to handle and press smaller pieces if I cut it up first.
 Along with the gown I received almost five dozen vintage handkerchiefs passed down from Andrea's Mother and Grandmother. Many of them had yellowed in storage so I soaked them in the Biz solution and they came out pristine, all the stains gone!
 You can see how the water turned yellow as it pulled the stains out of the hankies. After rinsing multiple times I rolled them in a clean towel to squeeze out excess water…...
 then pressed them on medium heat using a pressing cloth.…...
and the result is very satisfactory. These are to be appliqued to the squares cut from the gown and then joined all together to make a full size quilt that will fit a futon.
The amount of yardage available is limited so some of the squares will have a seam through them, but the hankies will mostly disguise that and the quilting will also distract from any seams.
Next step, cut up the skirt into squares, stay tuned!

4 comments:

Unknown said...

Wonderful tip about Biz removing stains and yellowing from vintage fabric. This will be a beautiful quilt, and I hope you will post pictures.

Gari in AL said...

What a wonderful project. But I'm not sure the sanity part will hold up. :-)

Cactusneedle said...

I think this project will be more fun for those of us watching your progress than it will be for you doing all the work! I'm glad you are sharing the journey with us.

Jocelyn said...

This is going to be a beautiful project!! Thanks for taking us along.