Latest Comments

Beatrix Experiment!
23. April 2024
The video doesn´t work (at least for me). If I click on "activate" or the play-button it just disapp...
Katrin Spinning Speed Ponderings, Part I.
15. April 2024
As far as I know, some fabrics do get washed before they are sold, and some might not be. But I can'...
Kareina Spinning Speed Ponderings, Part I.
15. April 2024
I have seen you say few times that "no textile ever is finished before it's been wet and dried again...
Katrin How on earth did they do it?
27. März 2024
Ah, that's good to know! I might have a look around just out of curiosity. I've since learned that w...
Heather Athebyne How on earth did they do it?
25. März 2024
...though not entirely easy. I've been able to get my hands on a few strands over the years for Geor...
MAI
13
0

Off To New Adventures!

Sorry for the blog silence yesterday - I had a very full day, and then I managed to eat something that did not agree with my inner plumbings at all. I'm still recovering, so it's taking it easy for the rest of today (the little cat being a very good model on how to nap inbetween).

Tomorrow I'll be off to a workshop on embroidery, organised by the wonderful people of EuroWeb - Europe Through Textiles.  The week after that has already been scheduled for some time off, as there's a public holiday on Thursday, making it predestined for an extra-long weekend.

So I'll be back on the blog on Monday, May 30. If you're looking for something to watch in that time, you might want to check out the conference recording from EuroWeb - Clothing Identities, here on their Youtube channel.

0
APR.
04
2

Ah, Vienna.

I'm back from the Vienna trip, and it was wonderful - giving a presentation in front of actual living, breathing human beings just is different from giving an online-only presentation. Though I am certainly delighted that the presentation was hybrid, that made it possible for a good number of other people to join in.

There were questions afterwards, and then there was the "Post-Kolloquium" which is the official moniker for "have a meal and some drinks together". It's been forever since I've been at a social like that and that, too, was wonderful.

On the next day, I got to meet up with some colleagues to have a look at a spectacular Bronze Age gold textile, or what's left of it, which is only the gold threads. Interesting debates were had about it, and I got to play a little with some of the testing textiles and give some input, and then there was time for a museum visit before we met up again for dinner.

Some more sightseeing was added in before we went home (the Most Patient Husband went along for the ride), there was bouldering at a Viennese gym (which sort of counts as sightseeing as well), way too much coffee, lots of delicious foods of all kinds, and a lot of rides on diverse public transport vehicles. I'm especially enamored with the Viennese Underground, as there are some sections where it goes overground, with very nice views, and even nicer stations designed by Otto Wagner, a famous architect. These stations are part of the cultural heritage and still in use, so you get to ride modern trains to historical buildings, built in a style that I like very much.

Using public transport this weekend had an added benefit: the vehicles are all heated. It got very cold in Vienna over the weekend, especially on Saturday and Sunday - there was even snow, and not just a few flakes, but enough for it to stay on rooftops and trees. Brrrr!

Now it's back to the desk for the more mundane everyday tasks... though there is the next presentation to prepare, for a workshop coming up towards the end of April. 

I'm still feeling a bit queasy about travelling, and meeting up with a lot of people within a short period of time; it's so different from the pandemically mostly secluded life that we have here, and that I've gotten so (maybe too) used to in the last two years. So I hope we haven't caught anything on our trip, and we plan to get a test today and in a few days again. 

As a side note regarding the pandemic: Rules in Austria are similar to those in Germany, which means that you will be allowed to take off your mask when in a restaurant and seated at the table. Which means that for the presentation, in the larger room with more air volume and lots of space for each person, everyone wore a mask... while those going to the post-colloqium were then seated at a small table, with little space between individuals, and in a much smaller room, not wearing a mask. I do get the rules, and I completely understand how these situations occur, but it's still sort of weird and makes the rules seem sort of haphazard...

0
MäRZ
09
0

CfP, CTR events, free access to literature

It's time for something like a link roundup again - textile conference related, this time.

The CTR has their programme online for 2022, and there's a number of meetings and lectures that everybody can attend. Every second wednesday there is a meeting from 14:00 to 15:00 followed by a presentation with discussion starting at around 15:00. The next one is on March 16, about modeling public buyer behaviour towards circular textile products and services. Learn more about the lectures on the CTR page (click the lectures link to download the current pdf programme).

EuroWeb has a Call for Papers out for a seminar which will take place in Portugal, June 29 to July 1st. The seminar is titled "What's in a name? Toponyms and loan words as textile labels across time.". The CfP is open until April 15, and you can learn more about the seminar and find out how to take part here.

Springer is granting free access to some of their programme until March 31st - including some archaeology things. Find out more here.

0
NOV.
05
0

The Weekend is Coming...

... and that is a very nice thing.

It's been a quite busy week; I've been preparing for some workshops in the Hansemuseum in Lübeck, to give the staff a bit of textile (spinning!) experience. It will be my first in-person workshop for quite a while (I'm not counting the European Textile Forum here...) and I am really looking forward to it. Online courses are nice, and they have their own advantages, but some things are still much easier to handle when everyone is actually in the same spot.

This week there's also, of course, been some work done on the Egtved project, and an online course today in the morning, and the usual shop-related things to handle. I certainly cannot complain about boredom!

In case your weeks are not busy enough, and you're interested in medieval manuscripts, you might want to join the livestream for a lecture next Wednesday - the Courtauld Institute is streaming "Fragmented Illuminations: Medieval and Renaissance Manuscript Cuttings at the Victoria and Albert Museum". The event starts at 17:00 London time, and it's free to attend; you can book your spot on the livestream (or actual tickets for the event in the Lecture Hall, if you're in London) via a link there.

 
0
OKT.
28
1

Manuscripts as Textile Sources.

Textiles sometimes survive in the weirdest circumstances - the Viborg shirt was pulled from a posthole, where it had carbonised (thus the linen fabric has survived). There's textiles that were used as tarring brushes, textiles used as toilet "paper", or those used as wrapping for metal items; in all cases, the coating led to them being preserved better.

Even better when the fabrics are not coated or permeated with something... but are preserved in good conditions. Dry and away from light, and protected from moths and mice and other critters that might have a use for them. Like... pressed between the pages of a book. Such as manuscript curtains.

If you go "huh?" now, that is exactly what I did. A friend pointed this possible source of medieval textile knowledge out to me, as she had heard a talk on the topic in one of the (digital) conferences she attended. And here's one of the little bits of good things the pandemic brought: Because the conference was digital, the talk is available online, on Youtube, and you can get a glimpse of this fascinating practice and, even better, a glimpse of some of the preserved textiles!

Datenschutzhinweis

Diese Webseite verwendet YouTube Videos. Um hier das Video zu sehen, stimmen Sie bitte zu, dass diese vom YouTube-Server geladen wird. Ggf. werden hierbei auch personenbezogene Daten an YouTube übermittelt. Weitere Informationen finden sie HIER
0
JUNI
10
3

About done.

If you looked in vain for a blogpost yesterday, you've probably guessed that it got gobbled up by the current project - which, as other publications tend to do, has eaten up all available time and then some. However, it's about done now (I'm keeping my fingers crossed that there will be no hiccup during the final file export), and hopefully everyone watching it will enjoy the thing on Sunday late afternoon.

If you're interested, you can find more info here on the page. Info text is in German, but there will be an English version of the presentation (where you will see that I didn't even try at all to match the voice-over to my German speaking face action...). I'm assuming there will be a link to the presentation posted on the site on Sunday at around 17:00 German time, but you might want to register for the Discord thing as well and hang around there in the EXARC channel - and join the discussion afterwards!
0
APR.
28
0

Hallstatt Bands in ATR!

I blame the weather for still feeling tired - it's mostly grey outside, and rather cold, though today there is a little more sunshine (which is nice).

There's better news than bad weather, though! A good while ago, I had the opportunity to take a closer look at two braided bands from the Hallstatt salt mines. Ah, it is always a wonderful thing to sit in the basement depot and see the original textiles, dating back to the Bronze Age, all sitting nicely in their little protective boxes and those in turn in a chest of drawers. (It's cold down there, though. I caught more than one cold during my visits... being so wrapped up in fascination that I did not realise I was cooling out too much.)

[caption id="attachment_2385" align="alignnone" width="421"]One of the two bands discussed in the article. One of the two bands discussed in the article. This is one of my working photos - the article has nicer images than this, of course.


From that close look and some trials in braiding, plus cooperation with Karina Grömer and Joy Boutrup, the two bands are now finally published in form of a proper, nice article, printed in the latest issue (n. 57) of the Archaeological Textiles Review.
If you have an academia.edu-account, you can find it here.
0

Kontakt