in the grass
Wednesday, April 21st, 2010letting the grass grow
letting the grass grow
The tennis balls were collected from Miliken at Lodgemore mill and the stitching began . Whilst in Stroud again I thought i would see if there were any local words relating to the mills and weaving.
Terry Eldridge has given me some words
abb - very old, still in use locally (Cam) means weft .
chain - very old, referring to warp threads, which were looped through like a crochet chain as a means of keeping them tidy prior to going on the loom. Sometimes the word also used when they were on the loom.
flight - airborne fluff that comes particularly off carding machines.
thrum - short lengths of carpet yarn that can be recycled.( not strictly a local word but nice )
nap - direction of pile. ‘raising the nap’ lots of nap on tennis balls
There are two lovely words in carding but not I think particularly local;
slubbing - end product of carding, loosely joined fibres producing a continuous length but having no strength.
They are wound onto a lage bobbin called a doffer- and you take it off.
You can imagine someone shouting over the machine noise doff,doff or doff er.. The slubbings go on to spinning next.
Most of the words are short and I wonder if that is because of the noise .
Do you feel as if you been through the mill? Could be the roller milling machine patented by local engineer James Ferrabee, replacing the fulling stocks, it squeezed and twisted the cloth to achieve the required shrinkage.Soon to be demonstrated at Dunkirk Mill.
myself and tawona had a great day yesterday playing with words and revisiting ideas developed on this project . I was reminded of ideas/ words earlier on in the blog which have now resurfaced in the final stages of the work.
we had an interesting conversation about the beaver fur hat and Tawona was telling me of a phrase in Zimbabue ‘filling his hat’ which means a good job has been done . ‘he has filled his hat.’
we also looked again at the title of each blog post
I am now beginning to work out exactly where the red punctuation marks are placed within the museum.. beside a beaver fur top hat , asian dolls , a soldier on a horse , a tennis racket, red sample cards … American Indian mocassins…
Playing with words based on the research to date, myself and Tawona will decide which words I will then embroider on the red tennis balls.
Venue: Museum in the Park, Stroud GL5 4AF
Date: Saturday 17th April 2010
Time: 2.30 pm
Tickets: £4.00 from the Museum on 01453 763394
Following the recent residency at the Museum of Deirdre Nelson and the partnering with Stroud International Textiles the staff of the Museum, the artist and members of SIT will discuss this fascinating and topical subject.
They will be joined by Collections manager of Cheltenham Museum & Art Gallery, Helen Brown.
Is it a marriage made in heaven?
Do they make happy bedfellows?
Is linking with contemporary art the future for Museums if they want to increase visitor numbers and move forward in the 21st century?
Join us and let us know what you think.
Tickets: £4.00 from the Museum on 01453 763394
with just a few weeks to go until the textile festival ideas are progressing well ..i dont want to give too much away about final work but i hope to combine elements of my research looking at stroud red cloth, balls, words and objects within the museum collection and of course the lawn mower and grass
look at THIS animated gif from the site I am not an artist