Threads, threads, threads…

My friend, Janet, recently sent me the link to THREADBARE, «an evolving collaboration between two clotheshorse academics to discuss the politics, aesthetics, histories, theories, cultures and subcultures that go by the names “fashion” and “beauty”».

Related:  pop-up clinic + Shirtwaists and the Price of Fashion +
MAKESHIFT: Jessamyn Hatcher + Recycled Clothing: Good for the Environment, Good for the World.

Worn Stories is a collection of stories about clothing and memory + Sentimental Value, clothing stories from EBAy + MAKESHIFT: THE FUSION OF DIY, MUSIC, CRAFT AND HUMMING + EXHIBITING FASHION, Exploring fashion and textile exhibitions, museums and collections + MakeShift Brings Down Home DIY Chops to Design Week.

THREADBARE links to OF ANOTHER FASHION, AN ALTERNATIVE ARCHIVE OF THE NOT-QUITE-HIDDEN BUT TOO OFTEN IGNORED FASHION HISTORIES OF U.S. WOMEN OF COLOR: very interesting tumblR blog that began «To expand this narrow view of American fashion, in June 2010 I began collecting home and professional photographs, magazine articles and advertisements, retail packaging, and garments and accessories of, by, and about women of color from various archives, rare and out-of-print books and magazines, and – most importantly – from the public for an exhibition called “Of Another Fashion».

They also accept submissions.

Maybe the most stylish librarian ever – check out that fascinator! Lucille Baldwin Brown was the first Black public county librarian in Tallahassee, Florida. This photograph is part of the collection at the State Library and Archives of Florida.

It’s 1956 in San Francisco and this is my grandmother, Encar Villanueva. She’s standing next my grandfather’s cadillac. Today, my grandmother or lola (in Tagalog) lives in a nursing home in San Francisco in the late stages of Alzheimer’s. But when this photo was taken, her personality was very strong.

THREADBARE also organizes fashion pop-up clinics. For more about this initiative, see Human-Textile Wellness Initiative, ~ An action research lab that documents people’s relationships to their clothing.

Cuff bracelets have become very fashionable and one of my favorite cuff makers is Loukia Richards.

Loukia Richards’ ’17th Century Embroidery Interpretation ‘ cuffs, silk, cotton, pearls

Loukia describes her work: «My work is inspired by old-fashioned activities such as sewing and embroidering. I admire how children transform ordinary materials into valuable assets and try to pay tribute to their game. I use natural materials – silk, wool, cotton, semiprecious stones. I produce small quantities because I work on my own. Every piece is unique and tells a story: of a couple meeting, a flower garland, and happy home. I search for vintage materials – buttons, textiles, stones. I want my jewellery to be funny but also detail orientated. I often use old garments, buttons and stones just to show that every material can carry a memory and still have a second life».

If, like me, you just want to see more and more of Loukia’s works, here are some links you maybe interested in: her BLOG.
MAKER OF THE WEEK  LOUKIA RICHARDS + Loukia RICHARDS Textile Jewelry from Greece + Loukia Richards: Micro-embroideries at the Fulbright Alumni Art Series 2011 + A Tiara Of Smileys (For The Foreign Minister of the US) + Alles heeft een betekenis, in Dutch but great fotos.

And, via Textile Forum Magazine , here are some new finds for me:

Issue 2, 2012: The Textile Forum’s review of  the 4th International Triennial of Miniature Textiles (Szombathley) introduced me to the works of Sara Richter, Agnes Kecskes and Judith Szekely.

a page from The Textile Forum Magazine….go here if you are interested in ordering a copy

Issue 3, 2012 includes a review of ARTAPESTRY3

p.s.  HACKING-Couture + à l’allure garçonniere  fashion critique blog + FASHION PROJECTS.

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Fifikoussout dresses

Being on Paros makes blogging more difficult for me so I make use of Facebook, volendo non volendo, while here.

However, Brod has inspired me to make an extra effort. What intrigues me is the use of one dress pattern and, via choice of fabric, create an infinite variation of styles.

Pattern from illustration by Debbie Powel

See Debbie Powel here.

Gouache & ink on Japanese paper, by Anna Kunz

The work of Brooklyn/Chicago-based artist, Anna Kunz, who has selected 30 of her rarely exhibited paintings on paper for our premiere launch of Uusi Studio. These paintings on Japanese paper are initially used by the artist to to generate a complex, interwoven vocabulary of light, color and form that later become part of her well known, larger scale work and installations.

Pattern from Illustration Leanne Shapton

Leanne Shapton likes to paint trees

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Take a look at this dress, too.

Pattern from Illustration by Herta Ko

Couldn’t find any info on Herta Ko but did find this:  Textile Designs of Josef Zotti.

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‘New’ Patterns from Josef Frank.

Illustration from sampler quilt by Hortense Horton Beck,1990

Scroll down to see:  Hortense Horton Beck Tells Her Story: I Wanted to Do Something Important.


Illustration from the book
cover The Silver Bridge, by Nura, 1937

Nura, Nura Woodson Ulreich


Illustration from the book cover
project by Julian Montague

Julian Montague

Painting by Clare Woods

There are many other dresses done using this same concept.  I haven’t found any description regarding the process but would assume that these dresses are made using Photoshop.

PATTERN PEOPLE BLOG + Digital Fabric on the Runway + A Beginners Guide to Digital Textile Printing + Introduction to Digital Fabric Printing + Printed Matter Part II: Make Those Prints Yourself!

Samantha Warren for Martin Margiela at Slow Textiles Workshop! + Inkjet Printing on Fabric + Diy sTAMPS.

How to make a garland for your hair

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Mirrors and Muy Marcottage

Carine wearing Muy Marcottage “Biodiversity”

I have been busy working on my Muy Marcottage dresses for Julia-et-Co so have dedicated little time to blogging.  But today a short break and a few links regarding the history of mirrors.

The earliest mirrors were pools of water.

The history of mirrors

Mirrors in art: This bronze mirror was found in the ‘mirror-pool’ at the shrine on Mount Haguro, where it was thrown, along with hundreds of other mirrors, as an offering.

Narcissus in the age of the snapshot:

Lekythos attique à figures rouges provenant de Velanideza. Femme assise tenant un miroir.

History of Mirrors + Mirrors in ancient world + Mirror gazing, or scrying, is one of the oldest known forms of divination, dating back to antiquity.

The First Fashion Model? Virginia Oldoini, Countess Castiglione

Mirrors framed in plastic bottle tops or pieces of flip flops circles and decorated using recycled rope.

Recycled Mini Magazine Mirrors.

“If you want to make the world a better place, take a look at yourself then make that change”
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Martine Bos, goddesses and felt

Martine Bos

Martine Bos is a delightful Dutch artist who does wonderful textile projects.  I asked her if she’d write a piece for my blog and here it is:

«Textiles and color are the two things that give me most joy. Working with textiles has been a lifelong passion for me.  Although I studied drawing,  I never stopped working with textiles.
For the past few years, I have worked more and more with  felt and silk.  After participating in two workshops with India Flint, I do many ecoprints on nunofelt.
Nature is an important part of my work.
My lastest work, “Return of the Goddess”, is inspired by the slow revival of feminine energy in the world.
Below are fotos of  cloth I made using pieces of eco printed nunofelt stitched  together».

To see more of Martine’s work, go HERE.

NANO FELTING: Nuno felting is a fabric felting technique developed by Polly Stirling, a fiber artist from New South Wales, Australia, around 1992 + jujulovespolkadots FELTING posts + Nuno felt scarvesby Sue Martin + EXPLORING NUNO FELT and ECO PRINT.

Arlene’s Felt–collar with vintage buttons

RETURN OF THE GODDESS: There is a force meandering about the world today, which in a host of different cultures, is best described as the belief structure which strongly suggests a scenario of what can only be described as The Return of the Goddess. The Return of the Goddess is a fascinating story about the little-known Neolithic prehistory of Old Europe (exemplified by the “Danilo-Hvar” culture in Croatia); about the highly civilized cultures and spiritual accomplishments of ancient peoples; about their trust in the Great Round of life, death, and rebirth; and about the customs and rituals they used to celebrate the divine in themselves and in the whole of the natural world.

ecoprint from the paperback fortress…..dyeing with onion skins, acacia seed pods, eucalyptus leaves and some mulberries….

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Packing & Suitcases

On my way to Paros and La Sussurrata so blogging will be A Bit Vague for awhile.

“Move-it” concept by David Graham —
DIY trolley

More suitcases:  Cardboard suitcases “Haeschenschule” + Exterior of cardboard suitcase + My little grey suitcase + Many more suitcases here + Child’s activity, make a Box Suitcase to develop your child’s hand-eye coordination and fine motor skills.

kevin-cheung’s cardboard suitcase

See, too, Kevin Cheung’s Boombottle, a speaker system build into wasted vinegar containers. Green Gadget alert: upcycled suitcase stereos.

Alternative uses for old suitcases:

Creative Uses for Vintage Suitcases.

Beyond The Picket Fence: suitcase blackboard

Mr JBE’s discarded suitcase has been rescued and recreated. Now a gorgeous suitcase cupboard with the original suitcase pouches still intact for storage. The perfect little cupboard for books, stationary or any other sentimental bits and bobs! + Recycled Suitcases Transformed into Charming Bathroom Vanities.

For more suitcase chairs, click HERE.

James Plumb’s suitcase furniture + Accessorizing With a Conscience + The Leather Collection by Maarten De Ceulaer + JIMT Idea: Suitcases + Leather Furniture Collection Upcycled from Used Suitcases.

Vintage Suitcase Shelves! + 10 Vintage Suitcase Tables for Your Home + It’s a vintage suitcase, er, stuck on the wall, y’know? + Suitcase Table.

Erik de Nijs’ SUITCASE FURNITURE

Suitcase rocking chair + Another cool reuse idea by Turkish design collective MayBeProduct, this time turning suitcases into chairs and footrests.

Suitcase guitar + Ways to Repurpose a Suitcase + recycled suitcases on pinterest.

Related:  Recycled Furniture | Home Decor.

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