Quilt Trails

Barn1One of our editors, Liz Aneloski, forwarded a link to the Quilt Trails website to the CT Staff. I enjoyed it so much I thought I’d share it with you all.

In the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, sits picturesque Yancey County, full of old tobacco barns and winding trout streams, just off the Blue Ridge Parkway. Here you’ll find a completely different summer quilt experience, part of a barn-quilt movement that has swept across much of the country in recent years.

One of the densest and most creative examples is the Quilt Trails of Western North Carolina. In just two of the participating rural counties, Yancey and Mitchell, there are more than 130 bright-colored wooden quilt blocks mounted to the sides of barns and buildings along highways and country roads and in small towns. The blocks range from two to eight square feet and are painted either in timeless patterns like Ohio Star, Log Cabin and Dresden Plate or in original designs reflecting their surroundings (the quilt block for the Burnsville Hosiery Company, for example, features socks in a star pattern).

Back in 2001, a woman named Donna Sue Groves decided to paint a wooden quilt block on an Ohio barn in honor of her mother. Now people in at least 24 states have organized efforts to decorate local barns and buildings with quilt blocks, both to celebrate local traditions and bring in tourists.

—excerpt taken from Stops Along the Summer Quilt Trail, Wall Street Journal (May 23, 2009)

Check out all these quilt blocks that can be found along the trail!

quilttrail_blocks

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4 Comments

  1. Mary
    Posted September 21, 2009 at 11:22 am | Permalink

    Someday……I hope to go. Wonderful sharing!!

  2. Posted September 21, 2009 at 11:41 am | Permalink

    Fun! When we recently visited Kentucky I was in love with all the “quilts” on barns everywhere. So cool!

  3. Laura Casey #1943
    Posted September 21, 2009 at 8:07 pm | Permalink

    How beautiful !!

  4. aNN
    Posted September 24, 2009 at 8:30 am | Permalink

    I wish I lived near by. It would be a wonderful trip to take to see all these barns. Here in CA we mostly see vineyards and not too much historical barns. Forwarding this to friend who lives in Pa. I know she will be excited as much as I.

One Trackback

  1. By Tweets that mention Quilt Trails -- Topsy.com on September 22, 2009 at 10:55 pm

    [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Amy Steinberg. Amy Steinberg said: Check out Quilt Trails on the @ctpublishing blog. http://bit.ly/qUW60 LOVE that purple quilt barn! (via @laurawestkong) [...]

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