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Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sewing. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 June 2011

Review: Sew Retro


Sew Retro: Simple Vintage-inspired Projects for the Modern Girl and a Stylish History of the Sewing Revolution
By Judi Ketteler, 2010
Voyageur Press

Reviewed by Eddie

Let me begin by saying that I love this book. There are a lot of books around at the moment focusing on the retro or vintage aspect of crafts. While this naturally thrills me I don't think that they all focus equally on the historic aspect, but this book does. It is divided into decades beginning with the 1800's and ending with the chapter "1980's to today".
Each chapter introduces the period and talks about different aspects of sewing in this period. In the 1800's we have "the cult of true womanhood". Later we explore how sewing gave women freedom to earn a living or to follow fashion.
Each chapter also includes a couple of patterns and a designer Q&A. The patterns are very nice too although I don't think they are the main attraction of the book. They are beautifully written and illustrated well with great period images. It's a fun and interesting book and I learned a lot from reading it. I would recommend it any day of the week.

Review: Classic and Modern Fabrics


Classic and Modern Fabrics - The Complete Illustrrated Sourcebook
Janet Wilson, 2010
Thames & Hudson

Reviewed by Deborah Hannam

This is a large book. It is a beautiful book. It will take up space on the bookshelf and will need to sit with dictionaries and encyclopaedia!! When I first dipped into it I felt it was a reference book for professional designers, dressmakers and students rather than an amateur weaver and spinner such as myself. I was mistaken and rapidly found myself absorbed by the subject matter. It is a definitive guide to all the major fabrics in use today ranging from entries on well known classics such as Flannelet and Tweed to innovative newcomers such as Nanomaterials and Moisture Transport Textiles new to me but fascinating).
The layout is clear and attractive and consideration has been given to ease of recognition and identification. Each fabric is accompanied by a large scale photograph clearly showing structure and texture. Where necessary these include diagrams of construction. The text accompanying each photograph includes a wealth of fascinating detail, covering essential information such as the principle applications, history, construction, patterns and the usage of obsolete terms where appropriate. Cross references at the end of each entry widen the information. The entry on Glass cloth for example will lead to Diced Weave, Huckaback, Tea Towelling, and Union Fabric. All these are further described and illustrated.
This is a book for anyone who has an interest in fabric whether for professional or personal reasons. It is primarily a definitive reference book and should be included in any reference library used by students of textiles and fashion. It would provide an up to date reference book for anyone needing information about textiles in current use today whether professionally or for personal interest. It will also be of interest to those wanting an historical background to textiles, costume and interior furnishings.

Review: Japanese Taupe Quilt Blocks


Japanese Taupe Quilt Blocks
Susan Briscoe, 2010
A & C Black Publishers

Reviewed by Coral Jackson

Sumptuary laws in Japan prohibited commoners from wearing brightly coloured clothing, resulting in the widespread use of subdued colours which are still considered to be the epitome of good taste. Using this palette and taking her inspiration from traditional Japanese sources, the author has produced 125 patchwork and applique blocks which have a surprising contemporary feel.

She gives a good description of choice of fabric and appropriate colours. Contrary to my expectations, these were not confined to browns but included shades and tints of all colours. This gives colour palettes that can be warm or cool and give a quiet, restful appearance to the finished article.

Using good, clear instructions and numerous photographs, Susan Briscoe carefully takes us through all the stages from choice of fabric through to finishing techniques. There are numerous tips for sewing and design. The blocks are graded into three skill levels from easy to advanced. However, given the clarity of instructions I feel that even complete beginners would do well. All the necessary templates are in the back of the book to be traced or photocopied.

She has included six small projects– my favourites were the tote bag (great for a present!) and the satchel bag. These alone justify purchasing this book.

This is an excellent companion to her previous book ‘Japanese Quilt Blocks’.

Saturday, 12 February 2011

Blog inspiration: Rosa from A Ervilha Cor de Rosa

Rosa Pomar is the lady behind the blog 'A Ervilha Cor de Rosa'. Her blog is written in Portuguese as she lives and works in Lisbon, so unless you are fluent in Portuguese too, you have to translate her blog to read it. However, with the functionality of Google Translate this is not as big an issue as you might think. With every post she has some lovely photos so her blog is also such a pleasure to look at.

Living in Lisbon she is the perfect person to take you on a crafty tour of the city. It was already somewhere I would love to visit but now it is even more so. She looks at traditional crafts and talks to traditional crafts people about spinning (do fiar), knitting, tiles (quadrados), and quilting.
Her posts are so beautifully presented and the most interesting part of the blog from a history perspective must be her textile history posts.


D Laudecena of Peroselo teaching Rosa to spin (copyright Rosa Pomar)

If you have any interest in the African textiles from John Gillow's book of the same name (reviewed here) you might also be interested in Rosa's posts on African textiles.


Blouse made by Rosa from African textiles (copyright Rosa Pomar)

Rosa also sells her own craft work at Retrosaria.



Finally let me just say - if you do read Portuguese and find that I have misunderstood something on her blog, do let me know (preferably in a gentle and nice manner).

Do you have a favorite blog that you think I should take a look at then give me a nudge about it. I am always looking for new inspiration and interesting stuff.


The images in this post are copyright of Rosa Pomar who has kindly allowed me to use them for this post. If you wish to use the images please request permission directly from Rosa.

Thursday, 10 February 2011

Portrait of a Craft Historian


Ruth Goodman is currently known as an Edwardian woman living and working on a farm at Morwellham Quay, in Devon together with fellow Edwardians Alex Langlands and Peter Ginn (shown on BBC 2 recently). Together they worked the farm from autumn 2009 till autumn 2010. They also previously worked together on a Victorian farm at Acton Scott in Shropshire. Together with 5 historians and archaeologists, Ruth also participated in BBC2’s ‘Tales from the Green Valley’ where they explored living on a Tudor farm in the year 1620.
Ruth furthermore does historic consultancy for museums and the media and she does lectures and courses in British social history (learn more about this on her website). Next to all this she also finds time to sew and design replica clothing and she is a member of the Tudor Group.


Eddie: At Historic Crafts we have a rather wide definition of crafts from brewing beer to machine knitting. How would you define a craft?

Ruth: I would describe a lot of my activities as 'craft'. Cookery for example seems to me an almost text book example of traditional craft work. Housework too is a living craft tradition combining skills and knowledge that are handed down from practitioner to practitioner, involving the understanding and manipulation of a range of materials in a practical and hands-on fashion. Such skills do not appear spontaneously fully formed but develop over a lifetime. That these skills have not been lost but are the stock in trade of a large number of people is something to be celebrated.

Eddie: What would you say was your main craft? Is it sewing?

Ruth: If by 'main craft' you mean that which I have most often been paid for, then 'sewing' comes high on the list. I research and make replicas of historic clothing. At times in my life this has formed my main income, although at present it has no more prominence than several other activities.
Rather than producing for a mass market my craft is a bespoke one and aimed at museums, theatre and individuals who are looking for something beyond 'dressing up'.
For me it is not enough to produce clothing that 'looks sort of right' I am interested in following the techniques and thinking of the historical period. Craft skills develop and change over time, they are not static. Just because a thing was done in the 1920s does not mean that it was done that way in the 1820s or that the method of the 1820s was unchanged from that of the 1720s. If I were to employ the craft techniques of the 1920s to make a garment of the 1720s the finished piece would hang on the body completely differently, it would be tight in the wrong places and loose and floppy where it should be snug and structured. Likewise if I were to employ Tudor tailoring methods to an Edwardian garment the result would be both inaccurate and awkward.
Much of the skill in re-creating historical clothing therefore is working out the relevant methods and techniques, having a range of skills at your fingertips and knowing when and where to employ them. As with any craft this is an ongoing journey of exploration and refinement.
I find the research and the practise equally absorbing. Making garments raises whole hosts of questions that sends me back to the research and the research makes me itch to try things out. It really is only by physically doing something that you can get any depth of understanding of the process, whilst just banging out the same old thing without any sense of moving deeper into understanding it and striving for perfection would bore me.




Eddie: Making historic clothing seems to take up quite a bit of your time, where do you get the materials? I find it very difficult to find things like wool and linen.

Ruth: Finding good materials is of course rather tricky no matter which historic period you are trying to work within. However this scarcity means that you have to get to know and work with a whole range of other crafts people which is always a real joy. Weaver, dyers, spinners, printers and fullers, button makers, braid makers, leather workers, bronze casters, tin smiths, gilders and even wood turners fill my contacts page in the address book. I need to call upon all their skills to produce one outfit or another. I learn so much collaborating with people on these projects, knowledge which feeds back into my own craft work.
I also have to say that I truly enjoy the company of crafts people - I find that people who make things with care and commitment, whether that be a strawberry roulade or the knife to cut it, are so much more interesting and enjoyable company than those who simply consume. There is something about the process of making that makes us more fully human.

Eddie: How authentic are the methods you use when making clothes? Do you sit and sew everything by hand or does it go through the sewing machine?

Ruth: Having said all that earlier it should come as no surprise that I use the most authentic methods possible when I am making historical garments. If the garment is pre 1860 I will of course entirely hand sew it, later on in History certain parts were hand sewn and certain parts machined – I try to follow the original method in all cases.

Eddie: You try many different crafts through your work but are there any you do at home for yourself - just for the pure enjoyment of it?

Ruth: Knitting and straw plaiting and rag rugs. Oh and net braiding.
The knitting arose from a need to produce authentic hand knitted stockings for the Tudor period. There are a number of makers of coarsely knitted stockings to a broadly mid 17th century pattern, but the surviving earlier ones are finely, densely knitted with none of the later refinements. Having seen the real thing in several museums I just had to learn to knit so that I could make some.
The straw plaiting came from a fifteen minute lesson that I was lucky enough to receive whilst filming the Victorian Farm series. It is addictive, and I have made myself several hats since then.
Rag rugs popped up during the Edwardian Farm series. It’s extremely easy.
Net braiding is something which a friend taught me a few years ago in a Tudor context and was a skill that I was able to press into service for a spot of salmon fishing on the Edwardian farm. I usually braid very fine silk hair nets for Tudor hairdressing.
Naturally you can’t become an expert in everything and I have to say that all four of these are simply something that I dabble a bit in rather than class myself as a craftsperson in these areas.



Eddie: Do you think that crafts should play an important role in today's culture and why?

Ruth: I find it hard to imagine life without craft work, both personally and as a society.
The urge to make things and make them well seems to be built in; every child I have ever met enjoys the process. Given the chance to make a real thing kids settle down, become focused and relaxed. The same goes for adults. I wonder if the problem with modern life is that people don’t feel confident that they can make stuff. Modern life can be short on the opportunity to spend time with someone learning a skill and short of support for those who try. The constant drive for ‘cheap’ and ‘convenient’ can be disheartening.
Yet learning a set of skills, practising and perfecting them is deeply useful in modern life. Whilst some of us may wish to remain in an historical tradition producing items that are no longer in mainstream use, it seems to me that the skills, knowledge, understanding and approach form a springboard for a vast array of new projects and developments. Being a craftsperson gives you a mastery of materials and tools and a confidence in working with them. To use an example from the craft area that I am personally most familiar with, ancient hand techniques of stitchery and approaches to cloth cutting allow designers such as Vivienne Westwood not only to run successful modern clothing companies but to move textile technology onwards.
The traditional crafts, making traditional products in traditional ways, provide a ‘genetic seed bank’ for the future.

Eddie: How do you think we can keep traditional crafts alive?

Ruth: Actually I think traditional crafts are quite resilient. I have been reading books about the ‘last practitioner’ for thirty years. New craftspeople continue to emerge. New – if small – markets seem to pop up. Thirty years ago who would have believed that there was a future in charcoal burning? Not that any of us should be complacent, if we all keep banging on about what a joy these crafts are to do and how lovely the produce is, how useful and pleasurable they can be to own, perhaps we can give more people the confidence to try and to buy.

Eddie: Where does your interest in history come from?

Ruth: Not the foggiest – just sort of grew out of childhood excursions with my family and a shelf of really good books at home. My mother is also quite a skilled craftswoman – that helped.

Eddie: When did you begin to get interested in the crafty / experimental side of history?

Ruth: I married a man who had been re-enacting battles since he was 12. Now battles don’t interest me one jot, but once you get started looking into past lives how can you resist finding out what people ate for dinner, and by the way what does it really taste like?

Eddie: Do you use the things you learn in the TV series you have worked on in your daily home life?

Ruth: Of course. I stopped using detergent in my washing machine 6 or 7 years ago – the water and the agitation are all you need in 99% of washes. That was something I learnt doing Tudor laundry. We also eat much better after all that practise at historical cookery. My housework is much more eco-friendly than it used to be and our garden fence is the result of learning to work with hazel.

Eddie: What do you gain as a historian from living as a Tudor or Victorian person that you don't get from reading primary sources?

Ruth: Reading and studying, whilst vitally important can only give you so much. As soon as you try it out you realise how much you don’t know and that is a valuable lesson in its own right.
I gain an insight into what questions I should be asking, knowledge of where the gaps are in the historical record and of course an empathy with the trials and tribulations of a practical life.

The images in this post are copyright of Ruth Goodman who has kindly allowed us use of them for this interview. If you wish to use the images please request permission from Ruth.


Thursday, 19 August 2010

Portrait of a Textile Artist

Deborah Robson has agreed to let us do a portrait of her as a crafts person. We decided to call her a textile artist as her answer to the first question about what she sees as her main craft was: 'spinning, weaving, knitting, crochet, braiding, sewing, basketry ...'. Apart from textiles Deborah also loves books. She is an essayist and short-story writer and is the editor of Nomad Press. She blogs on The Independent Stitch about her passion for textile crafts and independent publishing. She is currently working on a book about animal-grown natural fibers that will be released by Storey Publishing next spring. You can also follow her on twitter (effortlesszone) - we are!


Have fiber crafts always been a part of your life?


Well, the women in my mother's family always sewed, and I began to sew before I could read. When I was about 9 years old, my grandmother taught me to knit. I already knew the basics of crochet, although I don't remember when I learned them. I also had my first taste of weaving when I was given a child's loom. Unfortunately, when the warp ran out no one knew how to replace it and I didn't have another opportunity to weave until I was in my early 20s and worked as a camp counselor. Not long after that, I took four lessons in weaving, using a rented loom that I carried back and forth to the classes on the bus, and then I bought a table loom and began teaching myself using books from the public library. I took up spinning at around age 25 when a friend brought over a spindle and some wool, gave me an introduction to the ideas, and left the stuff behind. Working with textiles is a permanent part of my life.


How do you feel about learning new craft techniques?


I'm eternally curious about the things one can do with yarn and thread. Basically, if I haven't tried a technique . . . I have just not gotten to it yet. I am learning new techniques all the time. While I learn primarily from books, I have also attended a few classes and am always learning new things from friends.


What materials do you prefer to work with?


I am very passionate about fibers. For years I have been studying natural fibers, especially those produced by animals and with an emphasis on the vast diversity of breeds of sheep. I am worried about the survival of these traditional breeds, some of which are already extinct. There are aspects of traditional crafts that we will not be able to maintain if we lose access to these materials.


Do you have any preferences when it comes to tools?


None whatsoever--except that they must be comfortable to use. I use my hand spindles and my spinning wheel. I have both floor and table looms (Glimakra and Schacht), along with knitting needles, crochet hooks, inkle looms, cards for card weaving, frame looms, combs, carders, flickers, nostepinnes, ballwinders, and swifts. My philosophy is that if it looks like it will do the job, then I'll use it. I do prefer aesthetically pleasing and functional tools.


Why do you think crafts are important?


I think it is important that we as a society remember how to MAKE things that are useful to us. In addition to remembering how to make things, we must also remember how to make them well. It is culturally essential that these skills are not lost and I think doing crafts has a strong positive effect on the individual crafters. The only way to keep traditional crafts alive is to enjoy and share what we do - both the skills and the crafted items themselves. I also think it is important to keep traditional crafts alive in their traditional forms. Otherwise we lose knowledge of what they were, and are. Creativity grows from skill, and there's a lot of skill to be found in traditional crafts.


Do you think much has changed in textile crafts since you began?


I am really heartened by the number of people who are currently engaged with textile crafts. There are so many more than there were in the 1970s when I really got going with these activities! Now we have access to materials and tools that those of us who were doing these things back then couldn't even imagine. Having said that, I have been quite dismayed recently that I can't obtain linen for handspinning of the quality that was available 40 years ago. The more people who engage in traditional crafts, the more ability we will have to support the suppliers of the finest materials!

The photo in this post is copyright of Deborah Robson. If you wish to use the images please request permission from Deborah.