A quilt is more than just a wrap to keep you warm on a winter night. They have come to be respected as works of art, but they are much more than that.
They are keepers of family tradition and expressions of faith.
Just as stained glass windows in Medieval churches portrayed biblical stories for illiterate parishioners, quilts tell stories of faith as well as family histories.
The artistry and history of quilting was has been on display throughout Berea this weekend for the city’s annual Quilt Extravaganza.
The exhibition opened Saturday at 23 locations and continues at least 11 locations today.
Saturday, at the WaysMeet Green Space location off Short Street, the biblical quilt collection of the Rev. J. Donald and Nancy Graham was on display.
It featured 17 quilts all with biblical themes. From “Jacob’s Ladder” to “Job’s Troubles,” each tells a biblical story.
There were familiar symbols, such as the cross and crown and others more difficult to decipher, such as “Robbing Peter to Pay Paul.” The “robbing” takes places as rings in the quilts overlap.
The “David and Goliath” quilt also takes some explaining. Look closely and you will see the Goliath’s shield and the smooth stones that David gathered from the brook.
“Joseph’s Coat of Many Colors” features perhaps the most patches of any quilt in the collection. “The patchwork quilt was an invention of pioneer homemakers,” Graham explained. “The pioneers couldn’t afford to waste anything, so every scrap of cloth they had went into their quilts.”
There are two “star” quilts in the collection -- “The Star of Bethlehem” and “The Morning Star.”
“The Hosanna” quilt features palm branch patterns, recalling the palm branches that were placed in the path of Jesus as he rode a donkey into Jerusalem on the Sunday before Easter.
“The Tree of Life” and “The Biblical Sampler” quilts are the most pictorial in the collection.
Graham and his wife own Appalachian Arts & Crafts and The Quilt Shop on the College Square in Berea. The quilts in the their collection were all made within the past 30 years.
“I’m sad to say that two of my favorite quilters, who made eight of the 17 quilts in the collection, are no longer with us,” Graham said.
They were Mary Frances Collins and Emily McCord, both of Madison County.
“Both used to bring quilts to our shop for sale on consignment,” he said. Graham, who also is an ordained minister and pastors the Kirksville Christian Church, began building the biblical quilt collection with purchases from Collins and McCord.
Across Short Street and the Berea Arts Council’s “Art Space Gallery,” a number of pictorial quilts with both traditional and contemporary designs, were on display.
Quilts by the L&N; Depot Quilters’ Club are on display today at the depot in Old Town, which also serves as the Berea Welcome Center. Also in Old Town today, Amish quilts are on display at Jazzy Jewels by Linda while antique quilts can be seen at Honeysuckle Vine.
Tolle Gallery and Something Olde on Chestnut Street also have quilt displays today, as do Appalachian Fireside Gallery, Promenade Gallery, Log House Craft Gallery, all on the College Square. The Quilts Shop and Gallery 103 have quilts on display today.
Bill Robinson can be reached at brobinson@richmondregister.com or at 623-1669, Ext. 267.
Features
August 5, 2006
Quilt Extravaganza continues in Berea
- Features
-
-
A Blue Christmas
With a $100 spending limit and a store full of options, Christopher Padron began his Christmas shopping Saturday morning. As he entered the aisles of toys, an East Coast Ryders miniature car caught his eye.
-
Not about the bulk
When Eastern Kentucky University student Megan McBride began training for figure competitions five months ago, she didn’t expect to win her second competition, the 2006 Kentucky Muscle Strength & Fitness Extravaganza on Oct. 21 conducted in Louisville.
- Sugary drinks are piling on pounds Americans have sipped and slurped their way to fatness by drinking far more soda and other sugary drinks over the last four decades, a new scientific review concludes.
- Quilt Extravaganza continues in Berea A quilt is more than just a wrap to keep you warm on a winter night. They have come to be respected as works of art, but they are much more than that.
- Spanish church service coming to Richmond Pastor Frank Quinones of Corpus Christi, Texas, is helping reach out to Hispanics in the Richmond community who are in need of a place to worship.
- Habrá pronto en Richmond servicios religiosos en español El pastor Frank Quiñones de Corpus Chisti, Texas, esta ayudando a extender la mano a los Hispanos que viven en la comunidad de Richmond y que necesitan un lugar para ir a servicios religiosos.
-
With a double wedding, they’re doubly blessed
Lee and Hannah Gentry stood smiling and holding hands at the front of the chapel Wednesday just as they did six decades ago when they first pledged their undying love to one another. Next to them, William Earl and Lucille Adams also stood, hand in hand, remembering the day all four of their lives became uniquely intertwined.
-
A glimpse of downtown
The Richmond Downtown Merchants Association is selling a set of four postcards based on watercolor paintings by artist local Ron Taylor.
-
Author returns to Alma Mater for first reading
“I wanted to have my first reading in Berea because this college and this town have been such a wonderful, beautiful influence over the whole of my life,” said author N. Frank Daniels. “I hope that at some point I’ll be able to repay the incredible generosity bestowed upon me by Berea College.”
- Cemeteries restored While Memorial Day began as a time to pay tribute to the fallen soldiers of the Civil War, the holiday also has become a time for many families to remember their heritage and honor the memory of their forebears.
- More Features Headlines
-






