My family moved to Austin and to Spring Lane when I was three years old. I lived there until I got married. It was an idyllic place for children! The bottom photo shows all of us from toddlers to teens who lived on Spring Lane. Right across the street from our house were two girls, Kitty and Judy, who became, along with Betsy who lived down the street, my earliest friends.
An earlier photo of me, my older sister Kathy, and younger brother Joe is the top photo. (Our little sister Martha hadn't yet been born.) Growing up on Spring Lane in the '40s and '50s really was idyllic. These were the days before air conditioning, and the hot Texas afternoons were often spent with Kitty and me, with sometimes our brothers (hers was also named Joe), playing cards and board games on a quilt under the trees in our front yard. At times Kitty and I made paper dolls or doll clothes for our Story Book Dolls. (My earliest sewing projects!)
The long summer evenings held exciting, block-long games of Hide and Seek. In the mornings before it got too hot, we rode bikes, venturing far from home and no one's mother worried about where we were, and we always made it home in time for lunch. One memorable summer we played a summer-long game of War. The bigger boys dug trenches in a vacant lot behind Kitty's and Judy's two houses and our weapons were mud balls. We younger kids were assigned the task of making the mud balls, a boring but a less scary occupation than actually taking part in the battles!
For my quilt I chose black and white fabrics to coordinate with my black and white images. The checkerboard fabric reminded me of the endless games of checkers we played on that quilt! I decided since I was featuring "vintage" photos, I'd make a vintage, traditional block for the background, one called Double Four Patch. I machine quilted simple diagonal straight stitches and then used a serpentine stitch for the borders. I've zoomed in on the two photos and posted them below, in order for others to see them better!
I'm sitting on the arm of the chair beside big sister Kathy, and Joe is sitting on the ground. As I said above, little sister Martha had not yet been born. |
I love that you worked in a black and white palette to coordinate with the photos. Your quilt really evokes the times of your youth. The checkered fabric to represent your checker games on the quilt is a lovely touch!! Very sweet memories of a childhood similar to mine. We also had endless games of Monopoly tooo!!! And enjoyed reading it all!! Thanks Alice for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteThis was from Nedra
DeleteFrom Andrea: To grow up on a street called Spring Lane! Your quilt and story has brought to life growing up in 1940's & 50's Texas. Wow, no air conditioning! We probably did not have any until the 60's, now that I think about it. Can't imagine living without it now! Using the double four patch block for your background sets off your photos and checker board fabric perfectly.
ReplyDeleteWhat a sweet quilt! I love your black and white fabrics, especially the checkerboard for the game. I remember the days without a/c. We had one box fan and we would lay in front of it and talk into it to make our voices funny. This is Judy
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the story of Spring Lane and seeing your wonderful "old" photos! Great memories!
ReplyDeleteCarolyn