Yellow and pink quilt

Welsh Double-sided Strippy quilt

This quilt has the popular “Strippy quilt” format of alternating lengths of two colours of fabric, machine stitched together before being hand-quilted. At first glance, it might be thought to be from the North east of England, where many such quilts were made – but closer inspection of the quilting designs reveals it to be Welsh.

Circular quilting design over both yellow and pink strips
The quilting design is not confined to the strip format

Whereas North Country strippy quilts always have designs such as cables, twists or feathers which run along each strip, this quilt has a quilting design more similar to  that on a Welsh wholecloth quilt, with a central “coin” and borders stitched over the entire quilt surface with no regard to the placing of the fabric strips at all. This habit is found on many Welsh patchworks.

Pink and Yellow quilt
Welsh double-sided strippy quilt

Bought via EBay from a dealer in Cardiff (who wrongly described it as a ‘Victorian, Durham quilt’), this quilt probably dates from the 1920’s or 30’s, when bright, contrasting colours of satin cotton which would be generally considered rather eye-popping nowadays were very popular with quilters. One side has five strips, alternating between old gold and deep rose pink, while the other side is mainly salmon pink with two side borders of what must originally have been a strong turquoise, which has now faded to a softer blue.

Salmon pink and blue quilt on bed
The reverse side is also assembled from strips – although there are only three

The quilting design of the central “coin” has radiating spokes surrounded by a simple cable within a double lined circumference.

Circular stitching design
The central design is a circular “coin”

A quarter circle of this design appears again nearby as fan corners, and half circles of the same pattern again are found all around the final wide border.

Half circles are stitched around the border
Half circles make the final border

In between are a row of concentric circles, and a border combining pairs of petals (or are they a rather straight version of a paisley pear?) with spirals.

Stitched border designs
Border designs include paisley pears and concentric circles

The stitching is fairly coarse, partly due to the impossibility of fine stitching through the thick wadding – I thought this was cotton as it is dense and fairly solid to the feel – but I managed to pull out a few strands from between the edge, and it is possibly kapok.

The butted edge is finished with a line of machine stitching.

I own another Welsh Strippy Quilt as well, which also shows a quilting layout bearing little connection to the patchwork strips

Yellow & Pink Welsh Strippy

As discussed in general terms on the Strippy Quilts page, quilting designs on those from the North East of England do follow the strips. Click on these links for examples: Pink & Cream strippy or the Red and White strippy

Alternating strips of hand-quilted fabric
This side has strips of pink and magnolia fabrics

This North Country example is double-sided.

The strips are yellow & magnolia on one side; pink & magnolia on the other side shown here.

You might also like to look at Wholecloth quilts

or patchwork Antique quilts

If you would like to know more about how these quilts were stitched, then look at this Hand Quilting page, which links to a whole series of pages for you to learn about Hand Quilting Basics