Category: Textiles

  • A little about American Indian beadwork

    Before the arrival of European settlers, the people of what is now the Americas used different materials – shells, bone and porcupine quills, amongst others – to make decorative (and portable) items. The coming of the Europeans brought glass beads to trade for furs, hides and food, and these quickly became a desirable item to…

  • This week’s Spotify playlist

    In this week’s list of music and sound that accompanies the blog there are references to International Women’s Day, wedding dresses, nursing, weaving and more. The playlist is on Spotify and paid subscribers can listen to all the tracks without interruption while free subscriptions will have advertising breaks. Anyone without a subscription will hear extracts…

  • Weaving unearthed

    Sculptor-weaver, Sue Hiley Harris, is currently showing work at the Ruthin Craft Centre in Wales. This week, Saturday 9th March, the artist will be giving an illustrated talk about the work in the exhibition and the ideas and concepts that led up to it. Weaving Unearthed shows the sculptor’s interest in experimental woven structures and,…

  • International Women’s Day 2024

    This coming week, on the 8th March, International Women’s Day (IWD) is celebrated. At the first-ever events marking the day in 1911 more than a million people attended rallies campaigning for women’s rights and today the work continues around the world. This year the theme is “Inspire Inclusion”. As part of the celebrations, a piece…

  • The Nurses’ Memorial Chapel

    The Nurses’ Memorial Chapel

    Beside the hospital in Ōtatahi Christchurch in New Zealand is a small chapel with a unique story. Opened in 1927 the building was the first hospital chapel in the country, and the only one to be dedicated to women who perished in war and in the 1918 influenza epidemic. It is also thought to be…

  • Update on the studios

    The studios in Māwhera Greymouth are fully operational now. Above the Regent Theatre in town the textile collection is now hung up on rails in the storeroom and I have a friend sharing the space in the main room with me. Claire is a textile artist and dressmaker and I have offered some of the…

  • Chita!

    Chita!

    Brazil boats its own unique textile that symbolises the country’s exuberant personality in print. Cotton has been important in Brazil for centuries but during the period that the country was colonised and governed from Portugal, most cloth was imported. This was expensive and so, threatened by rising cotton agriculture, the government banned its production in…

  • This week’s Spotify playlist

    Each week the blog has an accompanying playlist on Spotify. The list includes music and sound that references the articles on the blog and you can listen on the link above. If you have a paid subscription you will hear all the music, if you have a free subscription the list will be interspersed with…

  • Beadwork from South Africa

    The beadwork from Africa is probably best-known from South Africa where geometric patterns and bright colours have come to symbolise the country. In this article, from Google Arts and Culture, pieces from Iziko Museums of South Africa are shown along with texts about the various people who make and wear the beadwork. Another article from…

  • Wool in Aotearoa New Zealand

    Wool is making a comeback in Aotearoa New Zealand but there are still hurdles to overcome. This article from New Zealand Geographic, along with a companion piece in the same magazine, explains more of the history of wool in the country and explores the difficulties, and solutions, for the industry. While wool is an introduction…