Episode 52 | Are Quilts Folk Art? Collecting Antique American Quilts with Laura Saville

In this episode of House of Folk Art, Matt Ledbetter sits down with longtime friend and antique dealer Laura Saville for a full conversation on antique American quilts, how to look at them, how to date them, and why more collectors are starting to take them seriously as both historical objects and pieces of art. Laura talks about falling headfirst into quilts over the last several months, studying fabrics, construction, and textile history, and learning how quilts connect to antique clothing, regional taste, and daily life in America. Matt brings in the picking side of it too, explaining how common quilts once were in Southern households, how they were stored, and why dealers used to bring stacks of them back from house calls and auctions. Together, Matt and Laura get into the practical side of collecting. They talk about mothball smell and why it does not always mean a textile is ruined, how long quilts actually take to make, the difference between quilts and coverlets, early whole cloth examples, hand stitching versus machine stitching, crazy quilts, Victorian era patterns, Gee’s Bend, what makes one quilt worth sixty dollars and another worth thousands, and how personal taste shapes what collectors chase.

In the back half of the episode, the conversation opens up into a warehouse walkthrough as Matt and Laura start pulling and discussing many different quilts in person. They look at fabric, stitching, pattern names, dating clues, collector categories, African American quilt interest, Double Wedding Ring quilts, and the kind of instinct that starts to develop when you’ve handled enough material. The episode ends with practical advice on how to choose a quilt when you are standing at a show and trying to decide what is actually worth buying.

If you are curious about quilts as folk art, textile history, or the real world of buying antique quilts, this is one of the most useful episodes House of Folk Art has done on the subject.


CHAPTERS

  • 00:00 | Laura’s Deep Dive Into Quilts

  • 01:15 | Dating Quilts Through Clothing and Fabric

  • 02:13 | How Many Quilts Were in a Household

  • 03:00 | Trunks, Attics, and How Quilts Survived

  • 05:30 | Mothballs and Getting the Smell Out

  • 05:47 | How Long Does It Take to Make a Quilt

  • 06:33 | Were Quilts in Early America

  • 08:30 | Coverlets, Whole Cloth Quilts, and Early Textiles

  • 11:05 | Hand Stitching vs Machine Stitching

  • 12:40 | What Makes a Good Country Quilt

  • 13:30 | Crazy Quilts and the Victorian Era

  • 15:00 | Quilts Inside Quilts and Picking Stories

  • 16:40 | Where All Those Quilts Ended Up

  • 17:00 | Quilt Racks and How They Were Used

  • 17:55 | Gee’s Bend and Quilts Entering the Art World

  • 20:40 | Why Quilts Read Like Art at Auction

  • 22:30 | What Makes One Quilt Worth More Than Another

  • 24:20 | Colonial Revival Quilts and 1930s Patterns

  • 25:30 | New York Beauty and Reading Old Fabric

  • 26:30 | Utilitarian Quilts vs Decorative Quilts

  • 27:30 | Learning Quilts as an Independent Researcher

  • 28:00 | What Should You Buy at an Antique Show

  • 38:00 | Moving Into the Warehouse Walkthrough

  • 52:00 | Looking at Quilts in Person

  • 1:05:00 | African American Quilt Collector Interest

  • 1:10:00 | Double Wedding Ring and Pattern Recognition

  • 1:20:49 | Deep Dive Into Collector Categories

  • 1:27:28 | Final Buying Advice for Quilt Collectors


Laura Saville is based in North Carolina and maintains a full time booth at The Antique Marketplace in Greensboro:

6428 Burnt Poplar Rd

Greensboro, NC 27409

Laura’s main booth is the first booth to the left behind the counter.

Laura also regularly sets up at regional antiques shows, including:

Tarheel Antiques Festival

April 10–11, 2026

226 North Lloyd’s Dairy Rd Efland, NC 27243

Liberty Antique Festival

April 24–25, 2026

2855 Pike Farm Rd Staley, NC 27355

Laura’s booth: M5

Fishersville Antiques

Expo May 8–9, 2026

227 Expo Rd Fishersville, VA 22939

Inside the first building

Do you know a folk artist or have a picking story worth sharing? Reach out to the show:

houseoffolkart@gmail.com

(919) 410 8002

Leave your name and where you are from and you might hear yourself on a future episode.

Follow @houseoffolkart for more stories, adventures, and upcoming auction dates at LedbetterAuctions.com.

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Episode 53 | 10 Picks Inside a 15,000 Sq Ft Folk Art Warehouse

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Episode 51 | Mary Proctor: Called to Paint