Quilting
Quilting is a textile technique that joins at least two layers of fabric with a layer of padding or filling between them through stitching, creating a thicker, insulated material primarily used for bedcovers, clothing, armor, and decorative purposes.[1][2][3]
The practice traces its origins to ancient civilizations in regions including China, the Middle East, and North Africa, where it provided warmth, protection, and ornamental value long before its widespread adoption in Europe during the Crusades and subsequent global dissemination.[4][5]
In the Americas, quilting adapted to local materials and needs, becoming integral to pioneer households for thriftily repurposing fabrics into functional quilts that also encoded stories, symbols, and community bonds, particularly among African American women in isolated communities like Gee's Bend, Alabama, whose improvisational designs drew from West African traditions and everyday improvisation amid economic hardship.[6][7][8]
Distinct methods such as piecing (joining fabric patches), appliqué (attaching motifs), and whole-cloth quilting (stitching patterns on solid fabric) highlight its versatility, evolving from hand-sewn utility to machine-aided art forms while preserving empirical techniques for durability and aesthetic complexity.[3]
Beyond practicality, quilts have documented historical events, personal narratives, and cultural resilience, as evidenced in Native American star quilts used in ceremonies and European settler patterns reflecting biblical or geometric motifs, underscoring quilting's role as a durable medium for intergenerational knowledge transfer and social commentary.[9][10]