 A Star in the Garden
Created for the 2011 Pilgrim and Roy Invitational Challenge. Participants were given Kaffe Fassett fabrics and challenged to only add two additional fabrics. I chose vintage red and white! This collection of quilts have traveled for the last year and will be auctioned at the 2011 AQS Paducah show to raise money for The National Quilt Museum.
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Pastel
Pretty
This quilt was designed when I challenged myself to
incorporate a set of poorly made circular blocks into a
compilation design. These pastel blocks were paired with vintage
solids and scraps of a Flower Garden top. It was expertly
machine quilted by Marty Vint and finished with pink piping.
This quilt was displayed at the 2008 Vermont Quilt Festival and
was part of an invitational exhibit at the Great falls
Quilts Show in October 2008. It has also hung on
teacher's row at the 2009 Road2California Quilt Show. |
Dancing to my Own Drum
This quilt was created as a part of the Cabin Branch
Quilters' Fortune Cookie Challenge exhibit in 2008. The
challenge was to create a quilt that reflected the fortune you
randomly drew. My fortune read "What would you do if you had no
fear of failure?". My answer was to Dance to my own Drum! This
quilt was created with leftover bits and pieces of lace,
embroidery, buttons and trims that belonged to my Grandmothers
and my Great-grandmother. The exhibit debuted at the
Mid-Atlantic Quilt Festival in 2008 and was displayed at the
Cabin Branch Quilt Show in Manassas, Virginia. |
Everything
Opal
This quilt was created in August of 2007 shortly after
my grandmother, Opal Wilson passed away at the age of 95. It
measures 19 x 24 and is a collage of some of her wonderful
treasures. Included with her hand painted linens are buttons
from her collection, vintage buckles, newspaper clippings from
the 1940's, a miraculous medal, the holy card that I received at
her funeral and much more. |
 Orange
You Glad You're Mine
was designed and pieced in 2004 to
honor my orange-loving daughter on her 18th birthday. It is a
compilation piece of blocks and vintage top fragments that date
from 1860 - 1940. The linen corners were hand embroidered by her
namesake and great grandmother, Kathyrne Elizabeth Say
(1912-2003). This quilt was hand quilted by Didi Salvatierra and
finished in 2005. It won a Judge's Choice award at the
Mid-Atlantic Quilt Show in 2006 and has also been shown at Quilt
Odyssey 2006 and the NQA 2006 show in Chicago. Orange You
Glad You're Mine hung at Winterthur for a special quilt
exhibit in 2007. This quilt now resides in Minot, North Dakota
with my daughter Katherine Kerr McPherson. |
Stars For Grandma Kay (2006) The center appliqué block
and all the solid fabrics are vintage pieces that were part of
my grandmother's, Kathyrne Say (1912-2003) collection. The
unusual black appliqué block is circa 1940. This piece was hand
quilted by Didi Salvatierra. It has been exhibited in the
Quilter's Hall of Fame, the New Jersey State Quilt Convention
2006 and hung on teacher's row at the AQS show in Paducah in
April 2007. It won both a third place ribbon and a Judge's
Choice award at the Vermont Quilt Festival in June 2007. Stars
for Grandma Kay was selected to be a part of IQA's traveling
exhibit, American Traditions that debuted at the Houston Quilt
Festival in October 2007 and traveled until August 2008. |
Grandpa's Pockets #1This quilt is part of a
series that was created from a robe that belonged to my
grandfather, Harry Wilson (1912 - 1974). I found the robe with
its three pockets in a trunk at their farm in 2004. To create
this quilt I used the striped fabric in conjunction with vintage
quilt blocks that are circa 1900. It was hand quilted by Arlene Troiano.
It was displayed at the 2006 New Jersey State Quilt Convention
and the 2007 Cabin Branch Quilt Show. |
Grandpa's
Pockets #2 This quilt is the second in the
series that was created from a robe that belonged to my
grandfather, Harry Wilson (1912 - 1974). I found the robe with
its three pockets in a trunk at their farm in 2004. To create
this quilt I used the striped fabric in conjunction with vintage
quilt blocks that are circa 1895. It was hand quilted by Dawn
Jolin. It was displayed at the 2008 Cabin Branch Quilt Show. |
Baby
BlueI was challenged to create a quilt using only 8
small vintage blocks from the 1920's. They arrived with scraps
of fabric and a piece of this quilt top that is circa 1940. It
was hand quilted by Didi Salvatierra. It hung at the
Mid-Atlantic Quilt Festival in February 2007 and was part of a
special QPN exhibition at the New Jersey State Quilt Convention
in June 2007. |
 Baby Blue Too.
I
used the leftover scraps from Baby Blue to create this small
wall hanging that measures 14 x 18. The vintage romper is
accented with buttons from my Grandmother's collections and
parts of a small porcelain doll that was found at the family
home in Wilsey, Kansas. This quilt was part of a special QPN
exhibition at the New Jersey State Quilt Convention in June
2007. |
Time Management
was created as a part
of the Cabin Branch Quilters' Quotable Quotes exhibit in
2006. The challenge was to take a well known quote and tweak
it in a new and innovative way. This quilt was a tribute to
our annual beach trip to Edisto Island, SC. Three families
and assorted extras gather for a week each summer to
celebrate friendship, sun, sand and relaxation. The
background is a piece of a vintage Drunkard's Path quilt top
and the stuffed champagne bottle features an PKP label to
honor the Kerr, Pernelli and Pittman families. The exhibit
debuted at the Mid-Atlantic Quilt Festival and has since
traveled to Chicago and The Road to California 2007 quilt
show.
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 In
Spite of Our Roots
was created as part of MDQPN's To
Color or Not to Color exhibit. This is a small piece that
measures 16 x 18. It was created from scraps of two different
vintage tops. Designed, pieced and hand quilted by me. This
piece represents the choices we make in our lives. Our past may
include some dark moments but the color we become is our choice
and our statement that we can flourish in spite of our
roots. |
 Guitar
Fish was created in a Susan Carlson class in 2003 and
represents one of my first ventures out of the realm of
traditional quilts. All of the musical motifs were fussy cut out
of a single length of music fabric. This quilt was also my first
attempt at machine quilting after over 20 years as a pure hand
quilting enthusiast. My guitarist son, Ryan, chose this 15 x 20
quilt to be the only quilt displayed in his room. |
 Scrap Crazy Stars
was pieced as a class sample using a pattern by
Terry Atkinson of Atkinson Designs. It is a great workshop for
beginning and intermediate quilters as the stars are pieced to
"float" so there is no danger of the points being lost. This 51
x 70 lap quilt was hand quilted by Doris Bloomer. This quilt is in the private collection of Fawn Pernelli.
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 Kansas Therapy
was created in 1999 after my grandparents' estate
sale in Wilsey, Kansas. At the sale, I purchased a vintage dress
(c 1900) that we had frequently played with over the years. I
carefully took it apart and used the indigo fabric to create
this 58 x 67 lap quilt. I made it as big as possible using only
the fabric I had from the dress and a new cream solid. This
special piece was hand quilted by Doris Bloomer. |
 Celtic Wedding Quilt
This 38 x 45 inch quilt
was created in honor of William Webster and his new bride
Tashina. They were married on January 3, 2009 in Savannah,
Georgia in a wonderful ceremony at the Catholic Cathedral.
Will's love of all things Irish was the stepping stone for
this quilt constructed of miles of bias strips and machine
appliqué techniques. Shannon Shirley collaborated on the
design and Will's mother, Kimberly Webster, will be hand
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These 4 quilts were designed to show
how one block can be interpreted in four different ways. Each of these
measure only 11 inches square and feature a variety of surface
embellishments. They were all machine quilted by me.