PRE-ORDER - Quiltfolk Issue 39: Washington, DC

SKU: ISSUE39
PRE-ORDER - Quiltfolk Issue 39: Washington, DC

PRE-ORDER - Quiltfolk Issue 39: Washington, DC

SKU: ISSUE39
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  • Manufacturer: Quiltfolk

LIMITED COPIES AVAILABLE - Washington, D.C. is a city of paradoxes—small in size but vast in influence. At just 68 square miles, it is smaller than Rhode Island, yet it holds more than 175 embassies, the nation’s most powerful institutions, and a daily population that swells far beyond its borders. Founded in 1790 from land carved out of Maryland and Virginia, the District of Columbia is younger than Georgetown and, in a legal quirk of history, hasn’t officially “existed” as a city since 1871. This issue includes profiles of AIDS Memorial Quilt, DAR Museum, Anacostia Museum, National Museum of the American Indian, Renwick Gallery and numerous talented individual and groups.

In 2026, as the United States marks its 250th anniversary, the nation’s capital feels especially resonant. Across the country, communities are reflecting on the people, movements, and stories that have shaped America over the last two and a half centuries. And what better place to consider that legacy than Washington, D.C.? Here, history is not confined to museums or memorials; it is woven into daily life, constantly evolving through the voices and hands of the people who call the District home. In D.C., all roads famously converge at the Capitol Building, the symbolic and literal center of its quadrants. Beneath the marble monuments and grand memorials, the city hums with everyday life—riding the nation’s second busiest Metro system, sharing more wine per capita than any state, and moving through spaces where history is never far from the surface. The Library of Congress stands as the largest in the world, while the Lincoln Memorial has witnessed both solemn reflection and transformative calls for justice.

But D.C. is also a city of intricate layering, much like a quilt itself. Neighborhoods shift within just a few miles, each adding their own fabric to the whole: Georgetown’s cobblestones, Capitol Hill’s rowhouses, and creative spaces where makers gather to cut, piece, and stitch meaning into material. It is within this layered, storied landscape that Washington, D.C. quilters create. Their work reflects a city stitched together from history, migration, memory, and meaning—where every thread, like every road, leads somewhere significant.

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