|
Procedures
for Inventorying the Boxes' Contents
If
you discover a collection of quilt ephemera:
- Make a list of the contents
in the order they appear in the box. Be aware of the order of
the items in the box as you remove things to study. Sometimes
an undated or unnamed quilt item will be identified by another
piece that is next to it in the pile.
- If time is limited, do
a taped recording of your vocal description of the box contents.
If the box owner is present, have her/him relate where and when
items in the box (and the box itself) were acquired. If the quiltmaker
who compiled the box is present, by all means, do a taped recording
of your conversation.
- Again, depending on time,
photograph important pieces in the box or photocopy items with
the owner's permission.
- Soon after the box documentation
session, review the list and notes you have made. Transcribe the
tape-recording.
- Use a Boxes Under the Bed™
Inventory of Contents
Form checklist to catalog and sort the materials. This checklist
can be opened, downloaded, and printed out in three different
formats.
- Finally, try to determine
the range of years the box was compiled. As you complete your
documentation be sure to list the owner's name as well as the
compiler.
To add even more value to
the information you are gathering, describe the box in a paragraph
giving as much information as possible: date, compiler's name, place,
and general types of quilt ephemera. Note the special aspects of
the collection.
The
Relative Importance of Quilt Ephemera:
All quilt ephemera is important
on one level or another, but some types deserve special notice due
to their rarity.
- A local newspaper
clipping with a date and photo that pertains to a quilt, quiltmaker,
or quilting group is a rare and important finding.
- An exhibit catalog with
a small print run is rare and important because it might contain
quilt photos and information about rarely seen quilts.
- Quilters' scrapbooks are
usually very rich sources of localized information.
- Letters and diaries with
references to quilts and quilting are also valuable documents--especially
ones pertaining to nationally known quiltmakers.
When
is a large comprehensive collection not so important on a national
level?
Let's take the example of
the Kansas City Star patterns. Round robin collectors in
the 1960s and 70s were particularly keen on collecting the full
set of patterns. All have been indexed and republished by various
individuals and organizations in the Midwest. If you come upon a
scrapbook or box of original Kansas City Star clippings from
the 1930s, their relative importance on the national or regional
level are next to nil-unless you happen to find the ONE elusive
pattern that people are searching for in your region! However, if
the clippings were the source of patterns a quiltmaker used and
her quilts are still owned by the family's descendants, these clippings
are very important at the individual, and therefore local, level.
When in doubt as to the importance of a collection, the best thing
to do is to document what you find while you are there to see and
study it. You may never have a second chance to do so.
Take
a virtual tour of our Boxes
Under the Bed Gallery
. Or, get started with your own Boxes Under the Bed project by dowloading
the inventory form.

.
|