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Colorful glimpses of yesterday are stitched together.

WEEKENDER

June 08, 1990|Gerald Faris and What: Quilt and Dollhouse Exhibit. and When: Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and Where: Assistance League of San Pedro-Palos Verdes, 1441 W. 8th St., San Pedro. and Admission: $2 donation; $1 seniors and children. and Information: 832-8355.

Dollhouses and miniature rooms, with their small, authentic furnishings and tiny figures, are invitations to fantasies--little glimpses of other times and places.

Quilts that dazzle with their colors, patterns and intricate stitchery are sometimes a window on family histories or reflect the inner thoughts of the people who make them.


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A collection of these things--miniatures and colorful quilts--will be brought together Saturday in San Pedro when the Las Primeras Auxiliary of the Assistance League of San Pedro-Palos Verdes stages its annual Quilt and Dollhouse Exhibit.

The long-running event raises funds for South Bay charities supported by the league. The 60 or so quilts to be displayed range from an unfinished 1880 quilt with a design suggesting a frontier log cabin to several made just last year. A 1990 panel from the AIDS Memorial Quilt, which commemorates people who have died of acquired immune deficiency syndrome, will also be shown.

The quilts are a kaleidoscope of patterns--from geometric zigzags to flowers, stars and animals--and colors, ranging from old-fashioned calico to shining satin.

Quilt exhibit Chairman Mitzi Cress sees quilting as "an expression of the inner self. . . . You get an idea, think about it and start a quilt, and you never know what it will be like until it's finished."

Cress and general show Co-Chairman Louise Campbell says some visitors are inspired to begin quilting or resume work on quilts they tucked away long ago.

In the world of miniatures, the league will display 10 crafted fantasies, including such things as a circus museum, country store, thatched-roof cottage and a Halloween party complete with a witch. One of them, a horse corral decorated for Christmas, was made as a class project by Omar Vasquez, a sixth-grader at Carson Street School.

The standout dollhouse will be the turn-of-the-century world of tiny, intricately woven Victorian wicker furniture and baby buggies created by Marie Terrones. The San Pedro artisan began her craft seven years ago after she tried to find a dollhouse for her daughter, who was then 2, and didn't like what was available.

With a long veranda containing a porch swing, tables and chairs, the miniature three-story blue house rises to a peaked roof, where wispy threads of cotton simulate smoke coming from the chimney.

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