Young Designers

Nicola B's carrot

Nicola B’s carrot, good enough to eat

Nicola B

Nicola Balakian

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Lisa Dillon, Bath Spa

My column in Knitting Magazine No133 is round-up of recent graduates seen at New Designers this year.

Just to clarify a small mix-up in the round-up, that’s not really Nicola (of the cabled carrot). That’s Lisa Dillon who is doing interesting things with texture and synthetic yarns at Bath Spa.

Hope that’s cleared that one up.

Meanwhile, anyone who likes the cut of Cari Morton’s shawl, here’s a link to her site http://www.cariandcarl.com

Shawl x3 for c-c.com 10.10 SMALL_900

The silence of knitting

IMG_2383This is Dawn Cole at an In the Loop study day at Winchester School of Art. Her performance piece, The Silence of Knitting, is based on the life story of her Great Aunt Clarice Alberta Spratling, a volunteer nurse during WWI. Dawn showed us some slides of her solar plate etchings that make beautiful patterns out of the writing found in Nurse Spratling’s diaries and letters. Then she sat down and began to knit. The audience weren’t sure what to expect, some music perhaps or a narration, but there was only the ‘cacophony of silence’. The trouble with quiet is that you start thinking about what those women must have been going through as they made socks and clothing for the men folk at the front. All those unspoken messages and thoughts being sent to brothers, fathers and husbands, woven into every stitch. The audience felt rather awkward and there was some shuffling in seats. Dawn worked a shamrock lace pattern, and didn’t stop until she had finished a whole pattern repeat.

MEN HAD EYES REMOVED

Men had eyes removed. Reading Between the Lines, Solar plate etching, Dawn Cole

This autumn’s Rowan magazine is out with an article about knitting in WWI by yours truly.

It has been a moving experience looking into the hardships of the period. You can recognise the same generous and stalwart spirits who inhabit the knitting world today.

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When you go home, tell them of us and say, For your tomorrows these gave their today.”  John Maxwell Edmonds

What’s #WellMaking all about?

Welcome to the Craftivist’s Garden. I’m an advisor for this exciting new project by Craftivist Collective with Falmouth University and Arts for Health Cornwall that is about collecting data so that we can prove to policy makers that craft is good for you. Of course we know this already, but you try standing up in the House of Commons and saying that, which is what MP for Penryn and Falmouth Sarah Newton would have to do. We thought she could do with some ammunition in the way of data. We need your help to spread the word, and the crafting before our finale next January. Download the app here.

The project was launched last night in London to great fanfare, some good cake and some lovely people. (Lots of quiet stitching and reflecting went on too as we made flowers for the Craftivist Garden.)

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This is the flower that I made (while thinking deep thoughts)CraftivistGarden

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Genevieve of Floss & Mischief was there

 

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Hilary of Craft Blog UK

 

 

This is the lovely Sarah Corbett of the Craftivist Collective explaining all about her new project.

Sarah says, “If you’re based in the UK, we’d love you to join in and hand-embroider, knit or crochet a flower for our #wellMAKING Craftivists Garden, while reflecting on the importance of wellbeing and what we need in order to flourish as individuals and as a society.”

Dentelle in Bayeux

IMG_2716A short holiday in Normandy couldn’t pass without a visit to see the Bayeux tapestry/not a tapestry. Research on that one continues, but in the Cathedrale square I came across this antique shop called Napthaline (like moth balls) and had a great haul. The owner was retiring so everything was going.  These are some of the things that I bought.

I didn’t know what these interesting things were. They are beautiful translucent colours.

mystsery itemsLike all self respecting tourists we drank coffee in a street cafe and made bracelets out of elastic bands.IMG_2650

It’s all yellow

This week it’s been all about yellow. I’m sure there’s a song in there somewhere, or perhaps it’s just fashion/spring (delete as inclined).

These are part of  Wanderlust by Jilly Edwards as seen at Collect 14.

Jilly Edwards, Winter Ploughing

Jilly Edwards, Winter Ploughing 

Jilly Edwards, Field Fence

Jilly Edwards, Field Fence

Donald Hamilton Fraser – Cyclades 1960

Donald Hamilton Fraser – Cyclades 1960

This shocking 60s yellow fabric is on display at the Fashion and Textile Museum as part of their Artist Fabrics exhibition.
Then the Emmanuel Cooper retrospective at Contemporary Applied Arts’ new home in Southwark (and it was all yellow too – apart from the pink ones).

later pots

Emmanuel Cooper, handbuilt pots

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