We're in the middle of an endless drenching windy storm, so I was happy to have interesting material in the inbox today.
Like a good student, I give my source so you can follow up if you want to. It's about textiles, particularly silk, that almost mystical thread, strong, fine, beautiful, warm, cool, takes dyes, and is almost indestructible.
Here's something that intrigues historians, weavers, and miniature makers, a threefer
Chinese knowledge was so far ahead of Western thought, it makes me stop dead every time I come across something like this.
And this early fabric store
I can see some blogistas peering eagerly at these stacks to pick out their quilting fat quarters!
And this one really has my heart
In giant stone form, this is the singles thread I spin with my spindle. I feel commemorated!
So that's my joy for today. I think I'll do a bit of spinning to celebrate. The wet weather is certainly good for spinning natural fibers. In Northern England, the damp climate was very helpful to the spinning of cotton, thread didn't snap.
Alas cotton has a terrible history, from the slavery of growing it on the plantations of the American South and the Dutch colonies, to the dark satanic mills of Northern England, quoting Blake, where little children worked long days and their elders died young from exhaustion and the brown lung disease resulting from inhaling cotton fibers.
We can't celebrate fibers without acknowledging the abuses. But we can protect today's workers, and ourselves if we engage in textile work. And we can refuse fast fashion which now traps textile workers in Asia in long days of dangerous, badly paid work. We can push for better regulation and worker protection. Closer to home, when we make for ourselves, buy our raw materials from indie producers, and make an art of visible mending, we're making a political statement.
This simple wonderment about silk then cotton, quickly became a soapbox! But this thinking, thanks to my enlightened working class parents, really does underpin my life.
Art and power, despite the denials of the society I grew up in and escaped, absolutely are for the likes of me! And the history teacher who told me a foundry worker's daughter, me, had no business taking the national exams, because they were for future leaders, has long been proved mistaken.
Onward, and happy day, everyone, breathe, I'll try to, while I fight the good fight with my trusty spindle! Yes, I do laugh at myself, too, getting all worked up when nobody's disagreeing with me.
The best time to get all worked up is when no one is disagreeing with you, lol!
ReplyDeleteDefinitely, that way you win your point!
Deletethe east was often ahead of the west in knowledge and skills. I blame the repression of christianity. and well, you know, women were supposed to stay in the home, not parade around and demand change. one of the elbows of my favorite purple plaid western style yoke and pearl snap buttons flannel shirt has worn a hole through. I'll patch it and it will be the second patch on the shirt. the first is in the front where I somehow tore a big hole in it.
ReplyDeleteI think Christianity was just a mechanism to codify what was happening. Good for you for patching!
DeleteI love the 'getting all worked up when nobody's disagreeing with me' statement!! I do that ALL the time.
ReplyDeleteNo business taking national exams because they were for future leaders?!! Wow. It's akin to my grade 8 teacher recommending that I should take the 'four year stream' in high school because it was 'five years compressed into four and thus more challenging'. Turned out she was dead wrong and the possibility of me being able to go on to university was closed because of it. Only the 'five year' students were considered for uni. I could have started over to get into the correct stream but I needed (and wanted) to get out earning money to help out at home.
I don't know why teachers are considered good advisors, judging from the useless advice most of us get. Particularly when the only professional life they know is teaching.
DeleteIt's hard to imagine a teacher saying that, but I know that's how it was back then. All very stratified and class-conscious. Our students do a huge project in Grade 6 on ancient China and all the inventions the Chinese created.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad they're learning about the massive inventions and discoveries of China. It would have to be a huge project.
DeleteI was in a once-posh expensive private convent school which had been forcibly converted into a merit based scholarship winners school. That teacher bitterly resented the gifted working class girls who showed up as a result. I expect we were more challenging to teach, too, than the conventional girls they were used to! We didn't just write down everything they said..
Glad you had the self-assurance to not listen to that history teacher. Teachers work wonders. Just not ALL teachers. Fascinating lessons here today.
ReplyDeleteI also had wonderful ones who definitely improved the direction of my life. Including fighting back the teachers who tried to block the daughters of foundry workers and miners.
DeleteAt the University, almost all the merit scholarship students were in those categories. Middle class kids trailed, not ready for tackling whatever they were presented with.
Speaking of fibers, yours were very warming during the rainy weekend. Thanks much!
ReplyDeleteSo glad to hear it. Even in Florida, wet days can be a bit raw.
DeleteWe are having that storm now in the northeast.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the reminder about cotton.
We're not done with the storm yet! You're queue jumping.
DeleteI can never talk about cotton without its history, lest we forget.
You are so right about cotton. And there is a good reason that it was known as King Cotton for a long time. I cannot even imagine the fortunes made from cotton on the backs of so many, many enslaved people.
ReplyDeleteYes, all that.
DeleteI also agree the best time to get worked up is when no one disagrees with you! You were strong even as a child, overlooking that awful teacher and foraging ahead.
ReplyDeleteLooking back I think my group were among the barrier breakers after the national law reorganized education, opening up merit placements over social and class privilege. That teacher was far from the worst we encountered as we embarked on hallowed middle class ground! It was made very plain that only highest achievement was accepted from the poors. To which some of us said hold my blazer!
DeleteTeachers in the past were so un enlightened. How cruel were their words. I’m glad you didn’t listen. I have alleys said. Going back to basics, learning old skills and lessening our reliance on others is the most political thing to do.
ReplyDeleteWhen the politicians have less control on us the better equipped we are to resist.
That makes us oldies very dangerous indeed
We are a force to be reckoned with!
DeleteBloggers do tend to attract readers with similar views to themselves. I've only heard of these negative teachers in England and not really elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteAnd with any luck, not nowadays! Thanks for stopping in, Andrew.
DeleteWhen I exhibited I often had older people tell me their experiences with natural fibers, maybe in cotton mills or factories, or loading cotton onto trains. Once a very old woman stopped and told me of working in a silk factory in France before World War I. Her job was to unspin the cocoons and wind the silk. It was fascinating, in spite of her daughter trying to drag her off to quit boring me.
ReplyDeleteShe was pretty skilled. Cocoons can hold hundreds of yards of silk thread. It's lovely when people see you working and want to tell you their stories.
DeleteSo many children have had their dreams dashed by careless words from thoughtless teachers. I am proud of you.
ReplyDeleteMy dream is to weave with silk but I need to get a bit more practice in as it isn't a cheap fibre!
At the moment I'm spinning a silk mix roving to weave with, cheap mill ends but lovely fiber.
DeleteI think being the youngest of a big shouty bossy family group, often targeted, was great training! It would take more than a few teachers to daunt me.
Your thoughts are well said and received, Liz I don't mind admitting I was was definitely trying to get a closer look at all those fabrics stacked behind the merchant - wondering how on earth he pulled out a cloth from the middle or the bottom!
ReplyDeleteI wonder the same thing!
DeleteWe learned nothing about Asian or African history in any history class I ever took (and our American history was shamefully sanitized). The miniatures from the Chengdu weaver's burial chamber are wonderful, and humbling to my European heritage.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you had some wonderful teachers amongst the awful ones. What a time you've lived through! You learned early to speak truth to power.
Chris from Boise
Our history was poorly taught, the American Revolution literally never mentioned! Largely white colonial rule was the focus. I love how the miniatures really teach us.
DeleteThat is absolutely fascinating about the loom. At first I wondered if it's a draw loom (about which I know practically nothing) and looked at various articles online. But no one's calling it that. Plus, different article writers are using weaving terms differently, so that adds to the puzzle. Admittedly, I didn't dig very deep, but discoveries of ancient technology always seems to unlock a few mysteries along with presenting a few more.
ReplyDeleteI know nothing about floor looms, so anything I can learn is new. I'm glad you got something out of that picture. I hope you'll let us know anything you might discover.
DeleteWe have local mills. They were not nice places, but I don't think there was a lot of child labour hereabouts. Perhaps I am wrong. Still reading about working conditions, chills my spirit.
ReplyDeleteThe worst of child labor in the UK was in the 19th century. But in other parts of the world it still goes on, sadly.
DeleteWe got the 30-hour deluge here. Back to deep mucky mud in the paddocks and me struggling to keep my boots from being pulled off my feet. Today the sun has been shining now and then, though, so YAY!
ReplyDeleteYou've had quite a year of weather, most of it about mud. :(
Delete