Quilt, Crazy pattern
The word "crazy" used to describe this type of quilt may refer to the cracked or "crazed" appearance of the blocks or to the possibility that a woman might go crazy piecing so many small bits of fabric together! By the mid-1880s, Crazy quilts were so popular that enterprising manufacturers offered them in ready-to-sew kits. The prospective quiltmaker could order complete kits in which there were precut pieces of silk that could be formed into blocks according to instructions explaining how to fit them together properly. Sometimes, the backing fabric was marked like the base of a jigsaw puzzle, showing where to place each piece of silk. Often the silk pieces themselves were stamped with a pattern, such as the outline of a flower, over which one embroidered. If quilt makers wanted to use their own silk and velvet scraps, they could still order appliqués, commonly machine embroidered, or at least sheets of perforated-paper patterns to use in tracing designs onto the patches. There were also iron-on transfer designs and even specially printed sheets of paper with oil-painted pictures that could be transferred onto fabric by pressing the paper backing with a hot iron. This explains the strangely uniform quality of many Crazy quilts, with their ubiquitous Japanese fans and Kate Greenaway figures. It also makes those Crazy quilts that are not as formulaic seem all the more extraordinary.
This quilt (1993.101) was a mother-daughter project. One of the donors, Dr. Grace V. Gorham (1902-1998), believed it to have been made by her mother, Ellie Keeler Gorham (1873-1965), and her grandmother Elizabeth Hickok Keeler (1847-1926). Among other charming fabrics, it includes an engraved patch of silk showing a fairy behind a wreath of flowers, on which is printed "343-Copyright by Robinson Engraving Co., Boston, 1883". Because it is one of the type of commercially available pieces made expressly for inclusion in Crazy quilts, it helps to date this one. This quilt, made when Ellie was about twelve, was probably an enjoyable project to work on with her mother—filled with brightly colored silks and many fancy embroidered patches, it must have been much more engaging for a young girl learning to sew than a regular cotton pieced quilt. Even its backing fabric is delightful—it is an extraordinary yellow-green printed silk with a repeating pattern showing rust-red crackles emanating from gray floral centers.
This quilt (1993.101) was a mother-daughter project. One of the donors, Dr. Grace V. Gorham (1902-1998), believed it to have been made by her mother, Ellie Keeler Gorham (1873-1965), and her grandmother Elizabeth Hickok Keeler (1847-1926). Among other charming fabrics, it includes an engraved patch of silk showing a fairy behind a wreath of flowers, on which is printed "343-Copyright by Robinson Engraving Co., Boston, 1883". Because it is one of the type of commercially available pieces made expressly for inclusion in Crazy quilts, it helps to date this one. This quilt, made when Ellie was about twelve, was probably an enjoyable project to work on with her mother—filled with brightly colored silks and many fancy embroidered patches, it must have been much more engaging for a young girl learning to sew than a regular cotton pieced quilt. Even its backing fabric is delightful—it is an extraordinary yellow-green printed silk with a repeating pattern showing rust-red crackles emanating from gray floral centers.
Artwork Details
- Title: Quilt, Crazy pattern
- Maker: Elizabeth Hickok Keeler (1847–1926)
- Maker: Ellie Keeler Gorham (1873–1965)
- Date: ca. 1883
- Geography: Made in Ridgefield, Connecticut, United States
- Culture: American
- Medium: Silk, silk velvet, silk thread, metallic beads, and ink
- Dimensions: 74 3/4 x 68 1/4 in. (189.9 x 173.4 cm)
- Credit Line: Gift of the Gorham and Nancarrow families, 1993
- Object Number: 1993.101
- Curatorial Department: The American Wing
More Artwork
Research Resources
The Met provides unparalleled resources for research and welcomes an international community of students and scholars. The Met's Open Access API is where creators and researchers can connect to the The Met collection. Open Access data and public domain images are available for unrestricted commercial and noncommercial use without permission or fee.
To request images under copyright and other restrictions, please use this Image Request form.
Feedback
We continue to research and examine historical and cultural context for objects in The Met collection. If you have comments or questions about this object record, please complete and submit this form. The Museum looks forward to receiving your comments.