Quilt, Crazy
Dateca. 1890
Maker
Lena Coffin
(1876-1951)
Maker
Augusta L. Gardner Coffin
(1838 - 1909)
MediumWool, cottons; silk embroidery threads (confirmed by microscope)
DimensionsOH 86 1/2" x 73 1/2" (220 x 187 cm.)
Credit LineGift of Mr. and Mrs. Russell J. Edmunds
Object number2011.609.5
DescriptionThis is a rectangular crazy quilt composed of 42 blocks, each pieced with odd-shaped patches and put together to appear random in their piecing. It is made of woolen and cotton flannels and embroidered with various fancy stitches and outline-embroidered motifs using silk threads. The designs include baseball players, the Statue of Liberty, and a prominent rooster, along with other birds and animals. One block in the bottom right corner is stamped with the makers' name of Coffin. The cover is bound with a three-fourths-inch folded strip of brown cotton and backed in plaid flannelette. It is not quilted.Stitches: buttonhole, chain, cross, fern, fly/feather, herringbone, knots, outline, satin and bundled satin, seed, stem,
Label TextMost surviving crazy quilts are made of silks and velvets for use as parlor throws. This one is more utilitarian in its approach, consisting of forty-two blocks of woolen and cotton flannels and sturdy fabrics with a backing of plaid flannelette. It was intended for everyday use as a bed covering. One block in the bottom right corner is stamped with the makers' name of Coffin. Family tradition recalls that Lena Coffin and her mother, Augusta Coffin, created the quilt before Lena's marriage in 1895 to Emery Farnsworth, a fisherman and farmer of Maine. The quilt descended in the family of Lena's great grandson, who donated it to the museum.
MarkingsOne block in the bottom right corner is stamped with the makers' name of "Coffin."
ProvenanceThe quilt descended from Lena Coffin Farnsworth (1876-1951) to Julia Farnsworth Elwell (1896-1983) and Ernest Albert Elwell (1889-1955) to Barbara Elwell Edmunds (1920-2011) and Robert Henry Edmunds (1913-1972) to Russell Jay and Diane Roedel Edmunds who donated the quilt to the museum.
1902
1914
1883
ca. 1890
1845-1855
Dated 1889
ca. 1860
1825 (dated)