Remembering Kathleen McCrady
Kathleen McCrady, 98, a great friend and supporter of quilting, of International Quilt Festival, of the Texas Quilt Museum, and of the two of us over many years, passed away this week.
Kathleen had a lifelong commitment primarily to traditional quilts and any project she tackled, she did with precision and detail, producing a legacy of beautiful quilts. Along the way, she mentored and taught many new quilters.
She belonged to the “lost generation” of quilters, women who after World War II decided to buy blankets from Sears rather than making quilts. Fortunately, Kathleen, who grew up quilting, continued, calling herself a “closet quilter” because no one she knew quilted.
Our association with her goes back decades to when, with Kathleen and Suzanne Labry we formed the Texas Sesquicentennial Quilt Association to see that the artistic and cultural contributions of Texas women through the predominately female art of quilting should be recognized during the state’s 150th birthday.
Planning that began in 1980 resulted in two years of Texas Quilt Search Days, followed by a four-day Quilt Conservation Seminar. It culminated in a laboratory conducted by a professional textile conservator ably assisted by Kathleen with her deep quiltmaking expertise. That lab prepared quilts for an historic touring exhibition to Texas museums.
In the years since, Festival has displayed many superb quilts made by Kathleen, and we are honored to have several in our collection. There is so much more we could say about Kathleen, but we think her quilts say it best.
Karey Patterson Bresenhan & Nancy O’Bryant Puentes
Co-founders
Texas Quilt Museum