| Check out these beauties from Pauline's Boyd's quilt line, Counterpane. | 
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|  | I know, I normally go heavy on the picture posting and light on the 
writing but I had to throw in some bits and pieces I gathered from a few
 of Pauline's interviews because she's as awesome as her quilts.
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"When I made my first quilt, around 2004, I had never even used a 
sewing machine. I had no fabric so I just went around the apartment 
cutting up stuff – literally the sheets, curtains, clothes." 
 
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"I had been struggling to work as an actress in New York for over ten
 years and the idea of letting that go started brewing in me. I took off
 to join my boyfriend in Asia where he was working, and I just took the 
time to sew and develop my quilting style. He bought me a foot-pedal 
table sewing machine and we dragged it home in a tuk tuk." 
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 | This quilt is made from her Dad’s old silk shirts from Paris, old tribal jackets and indigo from  Vietnam and Laos. via Cloth&Kind
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Her quilts often contain fabrics from eight or nine countries as well as vintage fabrics sourced locally.
 
 
 
"I’ve been lucky to be able to travel a huge amount the last few years- 
to visit my (now domestic) long distance boyfriend- and those trips 
always became these magical treasure hunts." 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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| Magical treasure hunts? I love that and they clearly pay off. The two quilts below for example  have gold fabric from a tailor's floor in Marrakesh. | 
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|  |  | Eternia Quilt: "Inspired by women everywhere who wear golden  headpieces and carry swords." (No big deal).
 
 
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|  |  | Quartz Quilt : "Inspired by the imagined life of a miner, my great grandfather's holy 
vision of white light in the
 mines of Southern Illinois and the quartz 
lines that
 move through rocks in Northern CA near the Yuba river."
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|  |  | Here's a photo of Pauline in Myanmar via Facebook: Smiles possibly iindicating an epic trade just took place? I like to think so. |  | 
"I ... love to trade for clothes when I travel. I’ll find 
out what the old ladies’ style is and buy new stuff at the markets and 
then go to villages. There’s always a really funny ‘here’s that crazy 
lady who wants our dirty old sarongs’ moment, but then they’ll start 
pulling out some quilting or patchwork to show me once we’re on the same
 page.” 
 
-One Kings Lane Interview, here 
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| Pauline must have some great stories. The quilt below is made with cotton, linen, hemp, silk and monk robes!  A trade I would love to have seen. 
 
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Pauline doesn't limit herself to the textiles she picks up on her travels. She also finds inspiration and a use for everyday fabrics.  
 
"... I’m just always looking, anything could be potential 
material- a striped end of an otherwise worn out kitchen towel, a dress 
that never quite fit. Men’s shirting from thrift stores always yields 
lots of yardage in more neutral tones and cottons." 
 
 
The screenshot below exemplifies the sheer awesomeness of her local sourcing efforts.  | 
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I could keep posting but I have to stop somewhere, and I think I made my point: Pauline should go down as the coolest quilter (if that's a word) in history.  If you want to check out her quilts for yourself you can find her quilt archive 
here, facebook 
here and quilts for sale 
here. 
 
Gorgeous quilts! Love this story, I wouldn't have minded more.
ReplyDeleteAwesome. I love her quilts and I am inspired to be even more creative with my quilts.
ReplyDelete