Finished, at long last

United States
July 2, 2007 1:14pm CST
When she was 13 my niece Goldie embroidered a set of quilt blocks. The next year my mother in law had the blocks pieced into a quilt top, and the quilt layered together and marked with the quilting lines. Since my father in law disliked having the quilting frame set up Grannie [mother in law] and I could only work on it when he would be gone for a few days. We had our longest stretches of time working on it during the annual out of state hunting trip our men went on. I think every woman in the family did put a few stitches in the quilt. As Grannie became less able or inclined to quilt I found that it was easier for me to quilt by placing the thing in a large round wooden hoop. Niece Goldie is now 47, so this has taken 34 years. I finished it on our June trip to Minnesota!!! Hemmed the edges, and Goldie is thrilled. I took pictures but they are very blurred [my digital camera is dying] I hope the ones my husband took turn out, and I hope we don't have to wait long for him to decide to get them developed.
2 responses
• United States
18 Nov 11
making something with the people that you love makes the object all that much more special and its ok that the process took so long to finish it because that just gives you and your loved one even more time to bond and grow closer together i am so different from my family that we hardly have anything in common with each other so we do not really have anything that we do together to help us to bond with each other so definitely cherish those memories they will last your life time and you will have the blanket there to help to remind you i know my mother still has some quilts that she and my great grandmother made together back when my mother was about my age
@cutepenguin (6431)
• Canada
7 Jul 07
Wow, that took a while. I once had an afghan that I was knitting take 6 years - there were a few breaks.