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Quilting Patterns and all Kinds of Quilty Treasures

Stitching a Sense of Place: Turning the Places You Love Into Quilts

By Deb Messina on May 15, 2026May 8, 2026

Some quilts start with a fabric pull. Others begin with a pattern you’ve been wanting to try. And then there are the quilts that start somewhere else entirely… with a place you have a connection to. It might be a state you used to live in, a park you visited, a journey you took – that took your breath away, or a vista that lives on in your memory and the pictures on your phone.

Banner text: 'Creating Quilts Inspired by a Place You Love' over a patchwork quilt background.

If you’ve ever stood somewhere and thought, I wish I could capture this, you’re already halfway to your next quilt idea.

Over the past few years, I’ve designed several quilts inspired by specific places, states, regions, landscapes, and each one tells a story that goes far beyond fabric and thread. These quilts aren’t just projects. They’re memories, experiences, and little pieces of geography stitched together.

Today, I want to walk you through how you can take a place that matters to you and turn it into a quilt that’s completely your own.

Start With the Feeling, Not the Fabric

Before you pull a single piece of fabric, take a minute to think about the place itself. Ask yourself:

  • What do I feel when I’m there?
  • What colors come to mind immediately?
  • Is it calm and quiet, or busy and energetic?
  • What makes it recognizable to me?

The goal here isn’t accuracy. You’re not making a map; you’re capturing an experience. Here’s the thing, if you and I were making a quilt about the same place, they would probably be very different quilts. Why? Because we each have our own experiences of every place we have been.

When I design a place-inspired quilt, I don’t try to include everything. I focus on what stands out most to me. That’s what gives the quilt its personality.

Identify the “Signature Elements”

Every place has a few things that define it, that make it recognizable. Think about:

  • Natural features (mountains, rivers, coastline, farmland, native flowers)
  • Local colors (autumn leaves, desert tones, ocean blues)
  • Cultural elements (architecture, history, regional motifs)
  • Seasonal highlights (harvests, blooms, weather patterns)

When I create my place-based quilts, each one has a handful of these signature elements that guide the entire design. Once you identify those, your quilt starts to take shape much more easily.

Translate Ideas Into Quilt Blocks

This is where things get fun. Now you’re probably asking: How do I turn those ideas into something I can actually stitch? A few approaches that work beautifully:

1. Use traditional blocks symbolically
Stars, flying geese, log cabins, they can all take on new meaning depending on color and layout. A star block might represent a state identity, while flying geese can suggest movement, migration, or direction.

2. Create custom motifs
If there’s something specific to your place (fruit, flowers, trees, landmarks), consider simple pieced or appliqué shapes to represent it. You can also probably find fabrics with these motifs in quilt shops from that area (look online – you’ll be amazed at what you can find).

3. Let color do the heavy lifting
Sometimes the design can stay simple, and the color palette tells the entire story. Think about how powerful a shift in color placement can be. The placement of color and shape can suggest something about the place itself without being too “on the nose”.

Build a Cohesive Color Story

Color is where your quilt really starts to “feel” like a place. Try this:

  • Choose 3–5 main colors that represent the location
  • Add a few supporting tones for depth and contrast
  • Keep referring back to your original “feeling” so you don’t drift too far

If your place is tied to a season (like harvest time, spring blooms, or snowy winters), let that guide your palette as well.

Here’s an example: I pulled fabrics that represented my first experience visiting Hurricane Ridge in the Olympic National Forest. The view was spectacular, even though the colors were a little muted due to the forest fires blazing away at the time.

Stitching a Sense of Place: Nature-Inspired Fabric Color - Hurricane Ridge

Decide How Literal (or Not) You Want to Be

There’s no rule that says your quilt has to be obvious. You can go:

  • Literal: recognizable shapes, clear references
  • Abstract: color and movement inspired by the place
  • Somewhere in between: my personal favorite

Some of my place-based quilts are quite literal, starting with a panel that celebrates the state or region. Here are a few examples where the tie to the place is very specific.

Stitching a Sense of Place: New York - Quilt
Enjoy the View. I’ve always loved visiting the state of New York – so much to see across this beautiful state.
New York - Quilt Label
Stitching a Sense of Place: Tennessee - Quilt
Smoky Mountain Memories. This panel of state landmarks makes for a great memory.
Tennessee - Quilt Label
Stitching a Sense of Place - Michigan Quilt
Home Sweet Michigan. I LOVED this panel and wanted to create a quilt celebrating the first state my ancestors immigrated to
from Scotland and Canada

Others that I’ve created fall into that middle ground. They hint at the location without spelling it out, and that’s often what makes them interesting in their own way.

Stitching a Sense of Place: Iowa - Quilt
Prairie Blossoms. Iowa has prairies as far as the eye can see, and I loved the flowers that poked up through the grasses.
Iowa - Quilt Label
Stitching a Sense of Place: Missouri - Quilt
Ozark Trails. The designs form a chain, which reminded me of a trail or a path. The fabrics include florals of Missouri-native flowers.
Missouri - Quilt Label
Stitching a Sense of Place: Ohio - Quilt
Stars across Ohio. A combination of stars and chain blocks.
Ohio - Quilt Close Up
If you look closely, you’ll see little brown buckeyes along with the roses in the floral print.
Ohio - Quilt Label

This is the latest place-based quilt I’ve created, and I’ve designed layers of meaning into this one.

Stitching a Sense of Place: Oregon - Quilt
Pacific Paradise was created using fabrics designed by Jason Yenter of In The Beginning Fabrics.
Oregon - Tree Block - Close Up
I chose to alternate Tree blocks with blocks representing the valleys to the mountain tops.
Oregon - Mountain Block - Close Up
This Mountain block starts with the pears from southern Oregon to Hood River, the dark green of the vegetation, then up the hill with world-class vineyards, and finally, the top of the mountain, represented by the animal fabric in the center.
Oregon - Quilt Borders - Close Up
The sashing and borders highlight the beavers (for the Beaver State), the pears and grapes, surrounded by clear blue water.
Oregon - Quilt Label

Add a Few Personal Details

This is what turns a good quilt into a meaningful one. Consider:

  • A fabric that came from that place (sometimes a panel is the perfect starting place)
  • Embroidery or quilting that adds names, dates, or coordinates
  • A label that tells the story behind the quilt

These small touches make the quilt uniquely yours, and they’re often the details people remember most.

Let the Process Evolve

Here’s something important: your first idea doesn’t have to be your final design.

As you start cutting and piecing, new ideas will show up. That’s part of the process. Some of my favorite design elements didn’t exist until I was already sewing. Give yourself permission to adjust as you go.

Your Turn

Designing a quilt inspired by a place you love is one of the most rewarding creative experiences you can have. It connects your work to something real – something personal. And no two quilts will ever be the same, even if they’re inspired by the same location.

So here’s the question I’ll leave you with:

If you were to create a quilt inspired by a place that means something to you … what would it look like?

Happy Stitching!


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