Thanks to all of you have told me about "clocking". They appear to be embroidered motifs around the ankle area of stockings.
Thank you to those readers who supplied a couple of good links here about stockings and the motifs here
http://www.mfa.org/collections/object/pair-of-infants-stockings-121440
https://georgianera.wordpress.com/2015/03/31/18th-century-stockings-how-shocking/
I googled images of early nineteenth century stockings and found many good pics there too if any of you want to follow it up further.
Monday, 2 January 2017
Sunday, 1 January 2017
Quilted Petticoats
I was given this old book for Christmas. It was first published in 1915 and this edition is 1948. Over the last 10 years I have fairly regularly made quilted petticoats / skirts using old quilts and my original inspiration was the quilted skirts worn by women connected with the fishing industry here on the north east coast of England. There are few references to quilted petticoats in any books so I was interested to read in this book two storiesI did not have any knowledge of. In one chapter Webster tells of runaway slaves being identified by their petticoats and later on she talks of women from Holland who settled in the USA and who wore short quilted petticoats all the better to show off their high heels and coloured hose with scarlet "clockings" ( no I don't know what this means!). I would love to see some photographs of these transplanted Hollanders in their quilted skirts and fine stockings if anyone can lead me to any archive photographs.
Friday, 30 December 2016
Woad Work
Have had time to put together a little collage this week using some of my left over bits of woad dyed fabric from Chateau Dumas last summer. I am returning in 2017 to run a slightly different course so why not spoil yourself and join me in the south of France? Full details are HERE. I don't have anything to do with the booking procedure as that is for Selvedge and Lizzie at Chateau Dumas to do so please don't contact me but go straight through the link above.
Wednesday, 21 December 2016
Another lovely bag
I have had a lot of comments about my last post so here is another example of an embroidered bag from the Sami people. My absolute essential viewing this Christmas will be "All Aboard! The Sleigh Ride" on BBC 4 at 7pm. A two hour sleigh journey from the point of view of the reindeer travelling across part of the Arctic Circle. There are no words but he is being herded by a couple of interestingly dressed Sami women. I have seen it before but can't wait! GB readers go and set your recording devices up now!
Tuesday, 20 December 2016
Reindeers and Christmas
At Christmas time I feel I can freely admit to loving reindeer and in fact all deers! Some of the best textiles I have seen this year were in the Nordiska Museet in Stockholm.
Tuesday, 13 December 2016
Worn Out
The last and smallest room of my current solo exhibition at The Customs House contains my most intimate and personal work which mixes up my love of working on to the surface of old quilts and my love for my grandmother. It brings together embroidered quotes from her diaries, some of her household possessions and my beloved old quilt fragments. I still use the fork on my allotment.
Worn Out
Worn Out
In the year
that Mandy Pattullo became a grandmother she has been thinking a lot about her
own grandmother who died more than 30 years ago. She was a poor farmer’s wife
and was worn out through trying to make ends meet. To supplement the income
from the farm she sold eggs, raised piglets for sale and looked after the
calves. In the lead up to Christmas she would sit in a cold barn and pluck
ducks and turkeys for the local butcher. Looking through her diaries Mandy
could see that she had many livestock and money worries, but her own good memories are of her working in the farmhouse garden,
making clothes on the old Singer and her cooking for legendary parties at the
farm. Reading the diaries and slowly sewing her words brings Mandy closer to
her life and helps her reflect on her own role as a grandmother to Bobby.
Sunday, 11 December 2016
Worn Through
So to the second room of my exhibition "Worn" at the Customs House till 29 Jan 2017. This second room focused on show casing some really big pieces of work which have been constructed from taking apart old quilts, unpicking surfaces and then reconstructing. I made some of the work for a gallery exhibition at Knit and Stitch a few years ago but have not had a gallery space big enough to exhibit it in the north east so it has been lovely to bring it home and also have the opportunity to hang some of the old quilts in their original state that I will be taking apart in the future. Here's what the wall info said
Worn Through
Mandy Pattullo treasures the old and worn and in particular the utility patchworks and quilts made in domestic settings which relate to the thrift and ‘make do and mend’ culture of past times. She collects quilts which are past their best and uses parts of these and other old textiles to create new patchworks. The precious fragments of disintergrating textiles and unpicked surfaces form evocative compositions which force the viewer to re-examine fabrics that have become flawed through wear and tear, to find in them a new beauty.
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