Quilting My Way Out of COVID

In February, I started planning a queen-size bed quilt. I waited until after the holidays so I’d have a big time-consuming project to help me get through the long uncertain months while COVID still raged. Who knew when I’d be vaccinated or when we’d be safe? 

I’d grown accustomed to the restrictions. Aside from grocery store clerks, the only people we saw were our sons and only for a few minutes. When they visited, they hovered near the front door never taking off their winter jackets—all of us masked. With everyone else, it was phone calls or Zoom visits.

Time was heavy on my hands. Cutting and arranging little strips of color one square at a time was how I’d keep sane until spring when we could see friends and family outside. 

At one level, I was immersing myself in a creative process involving color and texture—a visual challenge that has always attracted me. But part of the appeal this time was creating order, making sense of something when so many things outside my four walls didn’t make sense. Day by day I completed squares and made visible progress when the sense of progress out in the big world was tenuous. 

As March gave way to April, more people became vaccinated, including me. Winter eased up and I could be outside with friends again. In May and June, I began cautiously approaching a more normal life: seeing vaccinated friends, gardening, walking, and socializing.

I had less need of my quilting project, but it wasn’t finished. Like COVID, the project had lasted too long. I was so ready to be done. 

During the past week as I quilted the pieced top, batting, and back, I became intimately familiar with every inch and all the places where a seam wandered or a square didn’t align. But as my dad used to say when my husband fretted about a home repair’s small imperfection, “A guy riding by on a motorcycle probably wouldn’t even notice that.” 

If you’d asked me a week ago, I would have said the best thing about this quilt is that it’s DONE. 

Today, I’m again pleased with the cheerful colors. 

The quilt project served its purpose and its history will fade with time. A year from now, I hope only pleasure in the quilt’s color and pattern remains vivid. 

Comments

8 responses to “Quilting My Way Out of COVID”

  1. Ann Coleman Avatar

    It’s so pretty, Ellen! And what a smart way to spend the long days of lock down. I’m glad you found the patience to finish it even after the restrictions were lifted!

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      Thank you! I knew I wouldn’t want to still be working on it this summer 😉

  2. cmkraack Avatar
    cmkraack

    It is beautiful. Maybe when it has served its time, you should store it away with a card that tells the story about quilting during the pandemic.

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      Great idea—something for my imaginary grandchildren to discover 😆

  3. Margo Avatar
    Margo

    Oh Ellen it is beautiful! Like a symbol of hope and beauty and patience; a rainbow at the end of the war

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      I love that you see all of that in it!

  4. Eliza Waters Avatar

    It is beautiful, Ellen, and a perfect project to keep your mind and hands occupied as we waited for the ‘all clear’ to sound. Well done!

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