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  2. Quilts of Gee's Bend - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quilts_of_Gee's_Bend

    A 1979 quilt by Lucy Mingo of Gee's Bend, Alabama. It includes a nine-patch center block surrounded by pieced strips. The quilts of Gee's Bend are quilts created by a group of women and their ancestors who live or have lived in the isolated African-American hamlet of Gee's Bend, Alabama along the Alabama River.

  3. Loretta Pettway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loretta_Pettway

    Loretta Pettway (born 1942) is an American artist and quilt maker of the Gee's Bend Collective from Boykin, Alabama. Her quilts are known for their bold and improvisational style. [1] In 2006 her quilts "Roman Stripes" variation [2] and Medallion [3] appeared on two US Postal service stamps as part of a series commemorating Gee's bend quilters. [4]

  4. Freedom Quilting Bee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_Quilting_Bee

    The Freedom Quilting Bee was a quilting cooperative with members located throughout the Black Belt of Alabama. [1] Black women created the cooperative in 1966 to generate income for their families. In December of 1965 the Episcopal priest Francis X. Walter was in Wilcox county Alabama, when a quilt on a clothesline outside a small home caught ...

  5. Loretta Pettway Bennett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loretta_Pettway_Bennett

    Her first quilt, which she made at age 13, was a flower garden pattern. [9] Bennett completed about 25 quilts between 2003 and 2006. Bennett usually designs her patterns on paper first, then colors them with crayons.

  6. Lucy Mingo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucy_Mingo

    Lucy Marie (Young) Mingo (born 1931) is an American quilt maker and member of the Gee's Bend Collective from Gee's Bend (Boykin), Alabama.She was an early member of the Freedom Quilting Bee, which was an alternative economic organization created in 1966 to raise the socio-economic status of African-American communities in Alabama.

  7. Boykin, Alabama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boykin,_Alabama

    In June 2006, a second exhibition of quilts opened at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, also organized by the Tinwood Alliance, called "Gee's Bend: The Architecture of the Quilt." It traveled to seven additional museums, including the Smithsonian , [ 14 ] the final stop of the nationwide tour was the Philadelphia Museum of Art at the end of 2008.

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