Daily Press (Sunday)

Patchwork quilts get new life as garments

- By Isabel Slone

After Cassandra Siegenthal­er’s mother died in

June 2019, Siegenthal­er, going through her things, found a tattered, threadbare wedding ring quilt from the 1930s tucked inside an antique cedar chest. “My mother’s family was estranged so I don’t really know a lot about the origins of the quilt, but I do know it was one of the only things from her mom that she had saved,” she said.

After seeing Lydia Morrow, a plus-size influencer and lingerie designer, model a jacket-and-shorts set sewn out of an old quilt on Instagram, Siegenthal­er decided to send her family quilt off to a North Carolina seamstress who works under the name Emmy Ruth to be repurposed into a coat. “I wanted something that felt like a permanent hug from my mom all the time,” she said.

Siegenthal­er is one of a growing number of people upcycling generation­s-old quilts into wearable garments. Emily Bode, a menswear designer, was an early proponent when she ushered in a renaissanc­e for antique textiles with her homespun patchwork jackets and menswear oxford shirts circa 2018.

Designers like Loewe and Calvin Klein quickly followed, though high fashion has largely been reluctant to fully embrace the homespun. That, in turn, has encouraged many indie designers to upcycle heirloom quilts into cheerful, one-of-a-kind coats.

Brands like Psychic Outlaw and Farewell Frances offer “quilt drops” that sell out in minutes, and allow customers the option to send in their own quilts for a custom jacket. Some sell one-off coats and take commission­s, like Taylor

Randal of Softpaw Vintage, in Portland, Oregon, and Emmy Ruth, though Ruth is not currently taking commission­s, in order to keep up with demand.

Others, like Julie O’Rourke of Rudy Jude, have begun experiment­ing with quilt coats, documentin­g the process on Instagram.

“I started making jackets for myself because I wanted a Bode one but couldn’t afford it,” said Rebecca Wright, the designer behind Psychic Outlaw in Austin, Texas. Wright sewed her first quilt coats in 2019, but it wasn’t until January 2020 that orders picked up significan­tly enough for her to leave her full-time job as a sewer at Eli & Barry.

Since January, Psychic Outlaw has hired 13 employees, including six full-time sewers, to churn out kaleidosco­pic coats. After moving to Austin in May (from Denver), Wright has already moved once, expanding operations from a two-bedroom apartment into a house with a garage.

Carly Scheck of Tappan, New York, founded Farewell Frances in January 2020, after both her grandmothe­r and grandmothe­rin-law died within the same month. As for Wright, the quilt coats began as a personal project to honor the memory of her grandmothe­r, a textile artist, but grew quickly thanks to customer demand. “There was something really cathartic” about creating something that felt like being with her grandmothe­r again, she said. “When I made them and put them on, they transporte­d me back to a time when I was a kid.”

As warm, inviting and friendly as these coats may seem, they have an underlying tension. Quilts are direct links to the past as well as emotional objects,

imbued with the love and creativity of the person who labored to create them. Should they really be cut up and turned into coats?

“When you look at an antique quilt, you are touching and feeling and making a connection with the hands of an artist,” said Lyric Kinard, an artist and quilt educator in Cary, North Carolina. If a quilt qualifies as a work of art, then cutting one up may be a form of sacrilege, akin to taking a ballpoint pen to the Mona Lisa.

“If it is done with love and respect and honor, then I think it’s fabulous,” Kinard said. But wearing a quilt coat without any knowledge of its origins contains echoes of appropriat­ion. (Though “almost every culture in the world has some form of traditiona­l textile work,” she said.) Part of what makes quilts special is their historical associatio­n with women’s labor and handiwork. Kinard thinks it’s important to understand the history and the value of these objects before brandishin­g the shears.

“I always doublechec­k, ‘Is this a quilt that should be in a museum even though I found it in a thrift store?’ A quilt can be very damaged and still be very valuable,” said Marty Ornish, a textile artist in La Mesa, California, who has been making gowns out of “dead quilts” — a term for quilts that have been discarded by their original owners, though Ornish prefers the term “abandoned” — since 2015.

“Quilts are one of the most profoundly emotional, comforting, warm, spirited things on the planet,” said Becky Caulford, who designs quilt coats under the label Honeybea in Toronto. Caulford has a habit of anthropomo­rphizing quits in casual conversati­on because she believes each one has a soul, and refers to her work salvaging old quilts as “a very spiritguid­ed process.”

Few designers will deign to cut up a mint quilt, instead choosing to source damaged quilts salvaged from recycling plants and thrift stores to make their wares. “I call it quilt rescue,” Wright said. “I don’t buy any quilts that are not ready to be something else.” To compensate, Scheck has even started producing quilts out of vintage linen sewn by women in Haiti in order to put more quilts back on the planet.

Though the rustic jackets are inarguably de rigueur, there’s a whiff of paradox to them (along with, sometimes, a whiff of must). Quilts are meant to be treasured forever, surviving fleeting trends. And because each coat is made from a painstakin­gly handcrafte­d antique, it is by definition not reproducib­le on a mass scale.

Brands like Sea New York, Humphries & Beggs and Urban Outfitters peddling new approximat­ions seem to miss the point. Quilt coats are about recycling objects already made from household scraps, and creating new life from old memories.

“It’s amazing to see them everywhere all of a sudden,” Siegenthal­er said. “But I do think it will plateau and then the die-hard, weirdo, cottagecor­e people will keep wearing their quilt coats well into their old age.”

 ?? PSYCHIC OUTLAW VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Coats made from quilts by Psychic Outlaw.
PSYCHIC OUTLAW VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Coats made from quilts by Psychic Outlaw.

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