Midweek on this blog, we celebrate “INSPIRATION WEDNESDAY”.
I love sharing things from around the world that inspire my quilts, and especially love it when you share your inspirations with me!!
In continuing with “Harriet Powers” week, I found it interesting to see where she found her inspirations…..
Harriet Powers drew inspiration from many parts of her life — her faith, African heritage, everyday experiences, and the natural world around her. Living in rural Georgia during the late 1800s, Powers used quilts not simply as bed coverings, but as a way to tell stories and preserve ideas that mattered deeply to her.
Her quilts became visual narratives filled with symbolism, memory, and meaning.
One of her greatest sources of inspiration was the Bible. Her famous Bible Quilt…..

…. includes scenes from both the Old and New Testaments, such as Adam and Eve, Jonah and the whale, and the crucifixion of Christ. Powers likely learned many of these stories through oral tradition and church life, since formal education opportunities for formerly enslaved African Americans were extremely limited.
Through fabric and stitching, she transformed familiar biblical lessons into vivid pictures that could teach, inspire, and preserve faith within her community.
Nature and unusual events in the sky also influenced her work. In her Pictorial Quilt…..

….she included astronomical events such as meteor showers and “falling stars,” which she viewed as signs of God’s presence and power. Living close to the land, she carefully observed weather, animals, and celestial events, weaving those observations into her quilts alongside biblical themes. To Harriet, the spiritual and natural worlds were deeply connected.
Perhaps most importantly, Harriet Powers drew inspiration from her own life experience. Having lived through slavery, emancipation, hardship, and poverty, she understood struggle and endurance firsthand. Her quilts reflect resilience, faith, and hope — transforming scraps of cloth into lasting works of art and history.
OH, to create in this way!!!
Tomorrow, we will look a bit at Harriet’s life and how these quilts came to be museum-worthy!!
……………………………………………………………

Sign up so that you don’t miss a single inspiration…..