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  2. Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Threads:_Stories...

    Common Threads: Stories from the Quilt is a 1989 American documentary film that tells the story of the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt. [2] Narrated by Dustin Hoffman, with a musical score written and performed by Bobby McFerrin, the film focuses on several people who are represented by panels in the Quilt, combining personal reminiscences with archive footage of the subjects, along with ...

  3. How to Make an American Quilt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/How_to_Make_an_American_Quilt

    How to Make an American Quilt received mixed reviews from critics. It holds a 63% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 35 reviews, with an average rating of 6/10. The site's consensus states: "How to Make an American Quilt is a bit of a patchwork from a storytelling standpoint, but a strong ensemble cast led by Winona Ryder helps hold it all ...

  4. Patchwork quilt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patchwork_quilt

    A patchwork quilt is a quilt in which the top layer may consist of pieces of fabric sewn together to form a design. [1] Originally, this was to make full use of leftover scraps of fabric, but now fabric is often bought specially for a specific design. Fabrics are now often sold in quarter meters (or quarter yards in the United States).

  5. Patchwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patchwork

    A unique form of patchwork quilt is the crazy quilt. Crazy quilting was popular during the Victorian era (mid–late 19th century). The crazy quilt is made up of random shapes of luxurious fabric such as velvets, silks, and brocades and buttons, lace, and other embellishments left over from the gowns they had made for themselves. The patchwork ...

  6. History of quilting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_quilting

    Whole-cloth quilt, 18th century, Netherlands.Textile made in India. In Europe, quilting appears to have been introduced by Crusaders in the 12th century (Colby 1971) in the form of the aketon or gambeson, a quilted garment worn under armour which later developed into the doublet, which remained an essential part of fashionable men's clothing for 300 years until the early 1600s.

  7. Crazy quilting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crazy_quilting

    The term "crazy quilting" is often used to refer to the textile art of crazy patchwork and is sometimes used interchangeably with that term. Crazy quilting does not actually refer to a specific kind of quilting (the needlework which binds two or more layers of fabric together), but a specific kind of patchwork lacking repeating motifs and with ...

  8. Quilting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quilting

    Patchwork quilting in America dates to the 1770s, the decade the United States gained its independence from England. These late-eighteenth- and nineteenth-century patchwork quilts often mixed wool, silk, linen, and cotton in the same piece, as well as mixing large-scale (often chintz ) and small-scale (often calico ) patterns. [ 7 ]

  9. Patchwork (2015 film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patchwork_(2015_film)

    According to Derek Anderson of Daily Dead, the film is "A delightfully dark, Frankenstein-themed horror comedy about a re-animated corpse, made from the stitched together body parts of three murdered young women, that decides to go on a bloody quest to find their killer and avenge their deaths!"