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Corded Quilting Information

Corded quilting (also known as Marseilles quilting, Marseilles embroidery or marcella) is a decorative quilting technique popular from the late 17th through the early 19th centuries. In corded quilting, a fine fabric, sometimes colored silk but more often white linen or cotton, is backed with a loosely-woven fabric. Floral or other motifs are outlined in parallel rows of running stitches or backstitches to form channels, and soft cotton cord is inserted through through the backing fabric using a blunt needle and drawn along the quilted channels to produce a raised effect. Tiny quilting stitches in closely-spaced rows fill the motifs and provide contrast to the corded outlines.[1][2][3]

Corded quilting was popular for dresses, petticoats, and waistcoats as well as curtains and bedcoverings.[2] Originating in the fine whole-cloth quilt tradition of Provence in southern France,[4] corded quilting differs from the related trapunto quilting in which loose wadding or batting rather than cord is inserted to created raised designs. By the Federal era in America, corded quilting and trapunto were combined with whitework embroidery and other needlework techniques to produce a profusion of white-on-white textiles for the home before the fashion faded.[2][3]

Notes

  1. ^ Takeda and Spilker (2010), pp. 138-39
  2. ^ a b c Bath (1979), pp. 226–27
  3. ^ a b Weissman and Lavitt (1987), pp. 74-76
  4. ^ Weissman and Lavitt (1987), p. 76

References

· · Layered textiles
Quilting Baltimore album · Corded quilting · Crazy quilting · Foundation piecing · Hawaiian quilt · Nakshi Kantha · Patchwork quilt · Provençal quilts · Quilt art · Quilting · Quilts · Ralli quilt · Sashiko quilting · Trapunto
Patchwork Patchwork · Possum-skin cloak
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History & works History of quilting · NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt · Quilt of Belonging · Quilts of the Underground Railroad · The Quilts of Gees Bend · Tristan Quilt
People Sandy Bonsib · Jo Budd · Jennifer Chiaverini · Mimi Dietrich · Harriet Powers · Holice Turnbow · Marie Webster
Organizations, Museums & Events Great Lakes Quilt Center · International Quilt Study Center · Museum of the American Quilter's Society · Quilt Index · Quilters Hall of Fame · Quilt National · Quilt Treasures · San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles

Categories: Quilting

 

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