National Museum of the American Indian hosts a national quilt along in recognition of America's 250th
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National Museum of the American Indian hosts a national quilt along in recognition of America's 250th
Individual quilt squares commissioned by the National Museum of the American Indian and assembled into a single quilt for the 1997 “To Honor and Comfort: Native Quilting Traditions” exhibition.



WASHINGTON, DC.- The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian will host a nationwide quilt-along project to reflect on the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the continuing evolution of the country, communities and future as seen through a Native perspective.

This five-month, mystery-style quilt project begins in June and is open to all who would like to participate. Participants can join the quilt along and create their own commemorative piece by signing up on the museum’s website.

On the first of each month from June through October, a new pattern will be revealed via email and on the museum’s website. Each pattern is designed by a contemporary Native artist, representing different geographic regions of the United States. Each block will measure 10 by 10 inches, the border will measure 5 inches around and the completed quilt will measure 22 by 55 inches.

In addition to receiving patterns, participants will be invited to attend two webcasts, highlighting the designs and artists, and an in-person “sit-and-sew” event held at the museum’s Washington, D.C, and New York City locations.

The final quilted wall hanging will feature four blocks, each representing distinct periods of United States history through a Native lens:

• Pre-contact to the American Revolution in 1776
• Post-American Revolution (1776–1901)—the first 125 years
• 20th century to present day (1902–2026)—the second 125 years
• Our Shared Future (2026 and beyond)

The border theme, “Always Becoming,” surrounds the different eras of United States history to reflect the idea that the nation, along with its relationship to the Indigenous peoples of the land, continues to evolve.

This project received funding from the Smithsonian’s “Our Shared Future: 250,” a Smithsonian-wide initiative supported by private philanthropy and created to commemorate the nation’s 250th anniversary and support the Smithsonian vision for the next 250 years.
Patterns and Release Dates

• Block 1 (June 1): Pre-contact to the American Revolution (any time prior and up to 1776), designed by Lauren Good Day (Arikara/Hidatsa/Blackfeet/Plains Cree)

• Block 2 (July 1): Post-American Revolution (1776–1901), designed by Cissy Serrao (Native Hawaiian)

• Block 3 (Aug. 1): 20th century to present day (1902–2026), designed by Emma Alcazar (Chickasaw)

• Block 4 (Sept. 1): Our Shared Future (2026 and beyond), designed by Nikki Corbett (Yup’ik)

• Border (Oct. 1): Always Becoming border, designed by Margaret Wood (Diné/Seminole)

In-Person Sit-and-Sew

An in-person sit-and-sew will be hosted at the New York City and Washington museums Oct. 17. Emma Alcazar will be on-site in Washington, and Margaret Wood will be on-site in New York.










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