Sunday, April 02, 2006

201 Quilt Pattern - Review

Imagine having over 200 quilt patterns at your fingertips! Browse through the patterns, descriptions and instructions, then print the pattern you want and start quilting - today!

During my research of quilt pattern I came across this exciting offer that consists of:

A new eBook that is really valuable to quilting enthusiasts – whether novice or expert. It’s a digital replica of the famous classic 8” x 10” quilting book entitled "One Hundred and One Patchwork Patterns"… by Ruby Short McKim.
The eBook is jam packed with quilt name stories, cutting designs, material suggestions, yardage estimates and definite instructions for every step of quilt making and a FREE bonus of 24 Bird Life McKim patterns, Ruby’s 48 state flower patterns, 19 Eveline Foland patterns and 11 other vintage 1930’s patterns!

Why have Quilt Patterns in eBook format?

Quilt patterns in EBook format is much easier to use than a paper book, because of the following key benefits:
  • First of all, if you have your own eBook edition, you can make a hard copy any time you want! Quickly print off a hard copy of the book to carry it to an event you may be attending - for example a quilting bee - without having to worry about damaging it or losing it, because you can always print off another copy.
  • It is easy to print off individual pattern parts from your eBook, as well as instructions, for your current craft project. You don’t have to worry about damaging or losing the various pieces of your patterns as you repeatedly make tracings onto fabric. You can always print off another copy.
  • The cost of your eBook is a small fraction of the cost of a first edition of this historic book, if you can find it on the market at all.
  • It is easy for you to instantly search for words - apart from the index provided in the original print edition.
  • For a reader with poor eyesight. you can enlarge the type, either on the computer screen or in hard copy

90 Day Money Back Guarantee

This offer carries a 100%, Ironclad, Money Back Guarantee.

These quilt patterns are valuable and the instructions are thorough. That's why the vendors are willing to let you see for yourself and try everything entirely at their risk. Just get it and try it out.

If you are dissatisfied in any way, you have nothing to worry about because you can get all of your money back under the vendor's no-loopholes 90 day guarantee. No questions asked, no hard feelings. So you have nothing to lose and everything to gain. (It Sounds fair to me.)


To download the eBooks on your computer so you can start using these quilt patterns in just a few moments, click here and to see the free review.

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Quilt Pattern

Quilt Pattern

Quilt pattern collecting and quilt pattern history almost invariably uncovers an affinity between quilts and the lives of women that made quilts.Whether inspiration was a result of their environment, their family life, their religious beliefs, political or national commemorative events of their time, women seemed to have told the story through their creative quilt pattern and resulting quilts.

During America's early beginnings, women's humbly built homes and contents where far from comfortable. Food was scarce and their diets were poor. The ordinary colonial woman would have produced patchwork quilts for the primary function of protection from the elements (most probably without any quilt pattern as such i.e. "log cabin" quilts) from whatever scraps of material she could find. She barely had time for labor intensive creative hand quilting as she was always preoccupied with the traditional household chores and looking after her family.

The more affluent colonial woman would have had more time for creative needlework and their quilt pattern and quilting methods depicted styles from their respective mother lands. Quilt pattern for broderie perse style of quilting was popular with these women because availability of richly printed fabrics was low. Quilt makers would turn a small seam and appliqué say, floral motifs (cut from small pieces of printed fabric) to a bed size cloth backing in order to maximise the usage of these fabric scraps.

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, printing processes and fabric manufacturing advanced to the extent that fabrics became more affordable for the average American. Fabrics imported mainly from England and France were still expensive, however quilt pattern design and quilt making became popular pastime for a growing number of American women who had time for quilting.This transitional period for quilt pattern design saw quilt styles like the embroidered or stenciled quilt pattern overtaken by the influx of new appliqué quilt pattern designs. The medallion quilt pattern, strip quilt pattern, whole cloth quilt pattern, appliqué and patchwork quilt pattern evolved with the new fabrics.

By this time the tradition among women of naming quilt pattern and sharing quilt pattern was long established; quilting circles and the social implications they had on communities saw to that. Indeed the origin of names given to some of these vintage quilt pattern (particularly friendship or album quilt pattern) is still a source of intrigue today.

Quilt Pattern

Wednesday, March 15, 2006

Related Quilt Pattern Links

Other weblogs in this series include Quilting, Quilt and Quilting Pattern

Monday, March 06, 2006

Quilt Pattern - Welcome

Welcome to my quilt pattern weblog. This is where you wil be able to source quilt pattern and even create quilt pattern of your own.