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Vintageblessings

The storied designs of these hand-stitched heirlooms preserve days gone by while
offering perspective for the present.

Text by Holly Seng
Photography courtesy of Vintageblessings

Vintageblessings Ladies

In 1997, Trish Failla (right) and her daughter Taylor (left) began sourcing and selling vintage and antique quilts and linens. The duo took their business online through eBay a year later.

Before Trish Failla and her daughter, Taylor, launched Vintageblessings, an online source for antique textiles, they were enthusiastic collectors who enjoyed finding pieces to add to their ever-growing collection. The pair began by selling a variety of vintage wares in a booth at their local antiques mall until they discovered eBay in 1998, which proved to be the perfect marketplace and allowed them to start selling worldwide. So, they shifted their business online and narrowed their focus to heirloom quilts and linens.

“Every quilt that I come across, I think about the person who made it and [their] life,” says Trish. “I think that the history is important—and that [collectors] have something that’s one of a kind, not mass-produced.”

Trish’s love for quilts is heavily influenced by her late grandmother, Virginia Hartley, who raised three girls on a farm in Missouri during the Great Depression. Since fabric was too expensive for many people to buy at that time, feed sack companies began printing bags of feed in floral prints, even competing to make the prettiest designs so the bags could be repurposed to make clothing. “She would send my grandpa to the general store with a scrap of a feed sack in his pocket, and he had to go through all of the bags to find the one with that print,” says Trish. “The very smallest scraps went into the quilt scrap pile, and that’s why during the Depression era, you’re going to see really tiny pieces in the quilts.”

With new acquisitions from auctions, flea markets, and estate sales across the United States, the company’s inventory is constantly evolving, including antique quilts dating from pre–Civil War to the Great Depression in a plethora of patterns.

When starting a collection of vintage quilts, Trish recommends concentrating on a specific era, pattern, or color to avoid becoming overwhelmed. Depression-era quilts will always hold special significance for Trish, as they are, according to her, the most colorful and cheerful quilts that you’ll ever find. “To me, that says something today: Take what you have and be cheerful; be hope-filled.”

Vintageblessings - Gorgeous Nile green quilt sample

Gorgeous Nile green was such a staple during the Depression era. 
These quilt patterns include Robbing Peter to Pay Paul, Triple Irish Chain, and Daisy or Dahlia Appliqué.

Vintageblessings - Quilt draped over a wooden chest

Soaking in the winter sunshine, this Double Wedding Ring quilt dates to the 1930s. One of the most popular patterns of the era, quilters could use small scraps from their stash, making it a thrifty choice.

Vintageblessings - Turkey red eight-pointed star quilt sample

The grid quilting on this early Turkey red eight-pointed star quilt is quite lush.

Vintageblessings - Quilt draped over a swing

Made circa 1940, this colorful quilt features the Trip Around the World pattern.

Vintageblessings - checkerboard pattern

This vignette of vintage quilts from the 1940s includes Checkerboard and Baby Bunting in blue and white in the foreground and Lady of the Lake in pink and white. Garden Bouquet in pink and blue is tucked behind the birds on urn motif of Nancy Page’s circa 1931 work, while Stars & Garden Trellis in blue and white covers the background.

Vintageblessings - China Astor sample

Lovely feed sacks were used to create this Dresden Plate variation called China Astor.

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