This has been a crazy busy month, with the h+h trade show, Nathan's high school graduation (and family visiting for it), and then us traveling for Zachary's university convocation. With all of that, the last Friday of the month really snuck up on me and I almost forgot about the My First Quilt interview. Thankfully, I remembered late last night and was able to get the post ready this afternoon. Whew! This month Karen Neary is sharing the story of her first quilt.
From her home in Amherst, Nova Scotia, Karen Neary has been obsessively designing quilts full time for more years than she cares to admit. Her work has appeared in books and magazines, and her quilts displayed in shows around the world, including France and Japan. Karen even designed and made a quilt presented to Sir Paul McCartney to mark his visit to Nova Scotia in 2009. She takes great joy in making, and teaching. Her particular love is New York Beauty quilts. Karen is a Canadian retailer for Aurifil threads and has a well-stocked online shop of threads plus her books and patterns.
And now, here's Karen's first quilt!
What year did you make your first quilt? What prompted you to make it?
My first quilted project was when I was around 8 years old and made a Dresden Plate potholder, hand pieced and hand quilted. It proudly hung in my grandmother's kitchen for many years. My first big quilt was a very traditional log cabin made for my eldest son's first bed, well over 30 years ago.
What techniques were used in that first quilt? Did you quilt it yourself?
The quilt was pieced in red, blue and white scraps which included some of his baby clothes. The blocks were put together in a "barn raising" setting. Having no rotary cutter (and no patience for scissors) I tore the fabrics into 3" strips and sewed them together by machine using the 5/8" seam allowance I had learned from garment sewing. The squares mostly finished to around 12" and the quilt fit a double bed. After joining the blocks, I "birthed" the quilt by sewing it right sides together with the backing and turning it to the right side. I then machine quilted it just in the ditch between the blocks. It's a wonder it held together at all. The batting used was "Mountain Mist" polyester, a popular choice at the time.
Who taught you to make the quilt?
My grandmother Myrtle Davis was an avid quilter who taught quilt-making in her community, and I learned from her...although I sure could have used her help making that first one. I wish I had paid more attention to her instruction.
Are the colours you chose for your first quilt ones you would still choose today?
I absolutely love the red, blue and white palette and use it often still. I get why so many world flags use this combination as the colours work so well together.
Did you fall in love with quilting right away? Or was there a gap between making the first quilt and the next one?
I was hooked from the moment that quilt hit the bed. As awful as it was, it made me feel so good to think that I had made it. All these many years later, I've never lost that feeling with each new quilt.
Where is the quilt now?
Honestly, I was unsure this quilt still existed, but a search unearthed it shoved in the back of a closet. Not only did this quilt spend many years on the bed, it was dragged around the house, attended many sleepovers, and always went to Cub and Scout outings. It has many holes, some from wear, others from sparks from sitting too close to campfires. When it came time for this first son to head off to university, there was no way that raggy old quilt was going with him, so I made a newer version - same barn raising setting, same colours. By a strange coincidence, the new school colours were red, blue and white. It was meant to be! This time I cut my fabrics more precisely with a rotary cutter and used 1/4" seams.
After only a few blocks in, I realized the quilt was going to be HUGE so I set those blocks aside and started again with 2-1/2" strips. It came out to a much more reasonable size, and got finished up with free motion quilting and an actual binding on the edges. Sadly, it did not survive the dorm room experience. A year or so later, I found the larger blocks I had set aside and decided to make enough to do a table cover for quilt fairs. I still use that one today; nothing went to waste!
Is there anything you wish you could go back and tell yourself as you made that first quilt?
I think I would just whisper in my ear that this quilt would be the beginning of a journey that would bring great joy and creativity to my life. I have been so blessed to be able to pursue quilting as a career. (And also I would say, pay closer attention to the seam allowance!)
Thanks for sharing your first quilt with us, Karen!

























