Floral Motifs on Early Chintz
Tulipa sp. - Tulip
             Page 6
                                                                More Tulipa sp. (Tulip) Motifs
                                                       
(No pictures available at this time)

Six quilts, one quilt top, and one chintz panel with the same Tulipa sp. (Tulip) motif:
  • Private Collection of Charles Orr Dalton, Central Diamond Medallion Quilt Made by Ann Adeline Orr Parks, From Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, North Carolina Quilts, p. 52, c. 1830  
  • Collection of Marjorie Buell Richards, Broderie Perse Quilt, Grand Endeavors: Vintage Arizona Quilts and Their Makers, p. 133, c. 1825 
  • Private Collection of Miss Eleanor R. Thompson, Appliqué Quilt, Old Quilts, p. 186, no date 
  • Private Collection of Mrs.Lassovitch, Appliqué Quilt, Old Quilts, p. 189, no date 
  • Private Collection of Mrs. Adams-Coffyn, Appliqué Coverlet, Old Quilts, p. 196, no date 
  • The Charleston Museum, Chintz Appliqué Quilt, Social Fabric: South Carolina's Traditional Quilts, p.14, Object Number HT 740, c. 1840
  • Charleston Museum, Hannah Noland Henderson Quilt Top, Shelving Locator 2013.6, c. 1830 
  • Panel 6 in Appendix I of Merikay Waldvogel, "Printed Panels for Chintz Quilts: Their Origin and Use,” Uncoverings 34 (2013): 124  
 Also, check out the January 15, 2019 Chintz Panels in Quilts blog (https://chintzpanelquilt.blogspot.com/2019/01/panel-6-basket-with-primrose-pair.html) by Merikay Waldvogel and Barbara Brackman for several pictures, citations, and more information about the printed panel on which this motif occurs. 


Seven quilts and two chintz panels with the same Tulipa sp. (Tulip) motif:
  • Private Collection of Elsie S. Hall, Medallion Quilt Made by Sarah Alexander Harris Gilmer, From Cabarrus County, North Carolina, North Carolina Quilts, p. 43, c. 1828  
  • Collection of Kansas State Historical Society, Mellichamp Quilt made by members of the Mellichamp family and others, probably James Island, South Carolina, Southern Quilts , pp. 40-41, 1850-1855  
  • Charleston Museum, Chintz Appliqué Quilt, Object Number HT 740, c. 1840  
  • Charleston Museum, Chintz Appliqué Quilt, Object Number HT 586, c. 1840 
  • Charleston Museum, Governor Charles Hammond Chintz Appliqué Quilt, Social Fabric: South Carolina's Traditional Quilts , p. 15, c. 1840 
  • Charleston Museum, Chintz Appliqué Quilt Made by Mrs. Daniel Crawford, Object Number HT 742, c. 1840 
  • Private Collection of Helen H. Carey, Pieced and Patched Quilt of Chintz, Old Quilts , p. 178, undated  
  • The Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum, Printed Textile (Pillow case or sham or handkerchief cover), Object Number 1979.0058.009, 1790-1810  
  • Panel 7 in Appendix I of Merikay Waldvogel, "Printed Panels for Chintz Quilts: Their Origin and Use," Uncoverings 34 (2013): 124  
Also, check out the June 15, 2018 Chintz Panels in Quilts blog (https://chintzpanelquilt.blogspot.com/2018/06/gothic-ruin-panel-7.html) by Merikay Waldvogel and Barbara Brackman for several pictures, citations, and more information about the printed panel on which this motif occurs. 


Two quilts and one chintz panel with the same Tulipa sp. (Tulip) motif:
  • Daughters of the American Revolution Museum, Floral Roundels Medallion Quilt, Historic Quilts of the DAR Museum, p. 38, Appliquéd c 1815-1825, Quilted c. 1870 
  • Daughters of the American Revolution Museum, Chintz Appliqué Counterpane Made by Achsah Goodwin Wilkins, Object Number 2014.5, Eye on Elegance: Early Quilts of Maryland & Virginia, p. 65, c. 1820 
  • Panel 9 in Appendix I of Merikay Waldvogel, "Printed Panels for Chintz Quilts: Their Origin and Use,” Uncoverings 34 (2013): 124
 Also, check out the September 17, 2019 Chintz Panels in Quilts blog (https://chintzpanelquilt.blogspot.com/2019/09/small-floral-panels-9-and-17.html) by Merikay Waldvogel and Barbara Brackman for several pictures, citations, and more information about the printed panel on which this motif occurs. 


Three quilts, one quilt top, and one chintz panel with the same Tulipa sp. (Tulip) motif: 
  • Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, One of a Collection of Appliquéd Quilt Squares Made by the Family and Friends of Mary B. Clarke (later Mrs. David H. Porter), Object Number 2002-73,1, Four Centuries of Quilts: The Colonial Williamsburg Collection, p. 107, dated 1849 
  • Byron and Sara Rhodes Dillow Collection, International Quilt Museum, One Patch Quilt, Object Number 2008.040.0046, c 1820-1840 
  • Charleston Museum, Governor Charles Hammond Chintz Appliqué Quilt, Social Fabric: South Carolina's Traditional Quilts, p. 15, c. 1840
  • Charleston Museum, Hannah Noland Henderson Quilt Top, Shelving Locator 2013.6, c. 1830 
  • Panel 32 in Appendix I of Merikay Waldvogel, "Printed Panels for Chintz Quilts: Their Origin and Use,” Uncoverings 34 (2013): 125.
Also, check out the November 17, 2018 Chintz Panels in Quilts blog (https://chintzpanelquilt.blogspot.com/2018/11/) by Merikay Waldvogel and Barbara Brackman for several pictures, citations, and more information about the printed panel on which this motif occurs. 


Two quilts and one chintz with the same Tulipa sp. (Tulip) motif:
  • Brooklyn Museum, Elizabeth Welsh Quilt, Eye on Elegance: Early Quilts of Maryland & Virginia, p. 80, c. 1830 
  • Private Collection of Catherine Sharoky, Appliqué and Reverse Appliqué Eagle Quilt, Eye on Elegance: Early Quilts of Maryland & Virginia, p. 81, 1830s  
  • The Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum, Printed Textile, Object Numbers 1969.3345, 1969.3965.001, 1969.3965.002, 1969.3965.003, 1969.3965.004, 1969.3965.005, 1830-1835 
One quilt and one chintz with the same Tulipa sp. (Tulip) motif:
  • Maryland Historical Society, Mathematical Star Quilt Made by Catherine Mitchell, Object Number 1950.56.1, The Baltimore Album Quilt Tradition, pp 44-45, c 1830  
  • The Henry Francis du Pont Winterthur Museum, Textile, printed, Object Numbers 1969.3126, 1969.4599 A-J, 1969.8791.001, 1969.8791.002, 1969.8791.003, 1969.8791.004, 1969.8791.005, 1969.8791.006, 1969.8791.007, 1969.8791.008, Printed Textiles: British and American Cottons and Linens 1700-1850, p. 321, 1830-1835 

Additional Pages of Tulipa sp. (Tulip) :   1   2   3   4   5   7   
© Updated 8/16/2020    Author:  Terry Terrell