Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Orchid still going, doors, knitting group,Textiles and Tea

 


Morning light shining across the backyard and through the orchid blossoms.

Tuesday started with an appointment with the audiologist because I was missing words here and there and wondered if my hearing was deteriorating. Turns out it's Ruth and Laura's wires. They're now replaced and everything sounds clear again.

I got lost both ways. I often overshoot the ENT  office driveway because it's set back among trees, like a lot of destinations around here. 

Today I was about to turn in the drive and realized all I could see were earthworks and digging equipment. So I drove on thinking I'd turned too soon. No. They're digging up everything in front of the building which is still there and operating with half a parking lot and no exit. 

So I  got to the appointment after all, very successful, and managed to get out again after edging back and forth with another car whose driver didn't grasp this narrow area was now two-way. We managed not to back into the ditch or tangle bumpers and I was off home. Up to a point. 

The back road I take home was closed, with a detour sign in place.  I followed this but evidently missed the end of it and had a lovely country drive around a local science lab campus. Eventually I found a fairly legal u-turn place and wound my way back to a road I recognized, then finally, to my surprise, reached home.

I'd just put lunch -- roast potatoes, baby broccoli and a patty of spicy plant-based sausage -- in the toaster oven, when Mender Mike arrived with the newly finished drawer fronts and doors.  

Before


After, looking like new, worth the money 

Certainly a lot less than buying new. 

Then I was off to Tuesday Knitting Group, a cheerful group working in everything from a  stuffed cat, to a finished item being modeled here, with a terrible picture from your wobbly photographer, knitted socks, headband, a needlepoint seat finally picked up to finish after many years on hold.





The stickwoven strap on the bag interested the librarian and I showed her this model bookmark for beginners,  


woven, using drinking straws. I've taught this skill to kids but P the librarian thinks it might be nice for her monthly senior crafters. It can be done in one session, from first learning to finishing. And I had a request to bring in my weaving sticks next week, to see how it works.

Convo ranged over hearing aids, getting lost in your own town, forgetting names, cooking for one, baby pictures, face blindness, bees, bereavement, assisted living and more.

Home to a pot of tea and Textiles and Tea with Ruth Hallows, an indigenous weaver from the Pacific North West, who introduced herself in her own language.  She works daily in the practice of the traditional style and form seen in ceremonial regalia. Further down you'll see a picture of one of her ancestors in full dance regalia.

There are only fifteen of these robes extant, all in museums in Europe and Russia, not available for the sacred dancing,  but modern indigenous artisans have reverse engineered them to recreate robes.  

Laws were passed outlawing this weaving, on pain of having families broken up. Ruth's great grandmother had to comply in order to keep her family intact. In the US these laws have been revoked. In  Canada they're still, shamefully, on the books, though not enforced. So now the artform has to be revived.

She teaches the traditional Ravenstail and Chilkat designs, of the Northwest Coastal People from whom she's descended.  But she asks that non-native learners respect the sacredness of the ceremonial robes and significance of the colors and designs and use their skills making other weaving, not copying robes.

There are very few people who currently have mastered these twining skills, executed with a loose hanging warp, all the pattern tension and definition created by the weaver's hands. She would like more people to learn and preserve these skills.

She showed a couple of works in progress and a workshop of women learning the skill.

Sponsored by WARP (Weave a Real Peace), this was a powerful episode. If you're not familiar with WARP, check their website. They're active in grass roots peace work and intersectional connection via the textile arts.




Here's her great grandfather in ceremonial regalia for dance.



Here she's showing a drum which features the ovoid shapes characteristic of this art form, seen in the textiles. Each ovoid influences the next and all belong in the whole. It's a metaphor for their philosophy of life.


Simple setup to learn a difficult twining art form


Here she's showing how a piece is started on that stick, the warp threads secured at the top and left to hang. This is a Ravenstail design depicting the return of the salmon.


This is a personal artwork depicting the concept of unmasking


And here's a big artwork in progress started last spring, to be completed early 2026.


 Happy day everyone, Tuesday here was action packed!




33 comments:

  1. You're going to need a restful Wednesday after all of Tuesday's adventures! Glad that Ruth and Laura are working properly again, that you found your way home after a scenic drive, and that the cabinet doors are installed.

    It is wonderful seeing indigenous people reclaiming their heritage, that was so shamefully stolen. Reverse engineering the museum robes must have been a real challenge. Good for Ruth Hallows and her colleagues!

    Chris from Boise

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yesterday was an exciting day, one thing and another. I'm so impressed with Ruth, lovely person and so accomplished. Art is saving her people!

      Delete
  2. The knitting and weaving look too complicated for me, my brain isn't wired for crafts I think. The new drawers and doors look very nice.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This means you can be the recipient of crafted items, which is great, because makers need destinations for their work.

      Delete
  3. Your blog enriches my life! Glad you found your home. I’ve found often that I follow a detour sign which is never repeated and I have to guess my way for the rest. Ruth Hallows has a lot of talent... and patience! A big artwork to be completed in 2026. I should try that kind of project some time. I like immediate gratification.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. From what I gather, your sense of direction is much better evolved than mine, which is nonexistent! Even with detour signs, I've had it.
      The fiber arts are usually slow going, so maybe not your preferred medium. I like a bit of speed, too, such as water based monotypes!

      Delete
  4. Quite a busy day. We always say we have two seasons, winter and construction. The roads can torn up during the busy tourist season and you know how patient people can be. You did well to navigate the route through the tangle.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It would have helped if they'd put up signs, though. Especially showing there was a shared entrance and exit, arghgh.

      Delete
  5. I navigate almost entirely by landmarks and when those change, I am in trouble. And boy, do they change in Tallahassee. All the time.
    How I respect all of the people who keep their histories alive with textiles. And there are so many, aren't there? Not specifically the artists, but the different cultures.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Around here some intersections have been changed, trees felled, throwing me into total confusion! You can see how oppressed people have endured when you listen to someone like Ruth patiently recounting the history and the remedies she's part of.

      Delete
  6. You had quite a drive about to begin the day.

    ReplyDelete
  7. You sound like me. I get lost going places. Even ones I’ve been to regularly.
    I miss turns and then if I get a detour sign I instantly go into panic mode
    The robes are beautiful pieces of artwork.
    I’m glad the craft hasn’t been lost

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I dread detours because I'm already uncertain of my route, and they do me in unless there's a stream of traffic to follow.

      Delete
  8. Such beautiful works, and how great to have a weaver who knows the history and shares it as well as her weaving skills!

    ReplyDelete
  9. Glad you got the hearing aids figured out. I chuckled when I realized that Ruth and Laura are your names for your right and left hearing aids!
    Humans can be so cruel to other humans. I'm glad that Ruth Hallows is telling the story of her family's traditions and saving their techniques.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I named the hearing aids back when I was getting used to the idea. New readers may have been puzzled but you got it.
      Ruth is so gentle and so relentless in her defence of her people's traditions. I bet her ancestors would be proud.

      Delete
    2. Ruth Hallows, not Ruth Right Ear.

      Delete
  10. It's fortunate there were people who kept the skill alive to reclaim. Your cabinetry looks great.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The artisans are dedicated and so skilled. I heart my kitchen now!

      Delete
  11. So nice to have those skills being taught.
    your kitchen looks great! I love seeing pictures of all those hands that work so hard.
    Cathy

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, I have pictures of artist and artisan hands, so beautiful.

      Delete
  12. The kitchen looks great!
    I have zero sense of direction and get lost very easily. Detours! Who knows where I could end up--lol!
    Shameful what so many people over the world have done to various indigenous people. So glad they are reclaiming their culture and arts! Beautiful work.
    I love all the topics covered by your group. You have wonderful meandering conversations. Those are the best! :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Our conversation is what I think of as female! Many subjects, so varied, antiphonal, always so supportive and satisfying.

      Delete
  13. I like how the kitchen looks! I never got into knitting or crocheting, painting, basically, never got into crafts. I love to see the creations of those who have a talent in these things!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's important to be an appreciative audiences, too

      Delete


  14. "Laws were passed outlawing this weaving, on pain of having families broken up. Ruth's great grandmother had to comply in order to keep her family intact."

    No Bill of Rights for indigenous people back in the day.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sadly true. Still true in Canada, their weaving outlawed.

      Delete
  15. Those fronts and doors look great. Brilliant idea.

    ReplyDelete
  16. A scenic drive sounds rewarding after the difficulty in finding way back to home dear Boud 🤗
    I am happy that your hearing adds have been replaced 😊🙏
    Reinstallation of your cabinets is great 😊👍
    How exciting you are joining various groups to learn skills with new cheerful friends 🤗🥰♥️
    The old pic of the grandmother of your friend is awesome ♥️🙏
    Thanks for sharing process of how the rugs are made 🥰
    The first phrase and image is very elegant and poetic 🥹🥰♥️
    More goodness to you and yours my friend 🥰♥️

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much for visiting, Baili. I love how you pay attention to everything, it's rewarding to me.

      Delete

Please read the comments before yours and see if your question is already answered!