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Katrin Experiment!
14. Mai 2024
Thank you for letting me know - I finally managed to fix it. Now there's lots of empty space above t...
Harma Blog Break .
29. April 2024
Isn't the selvedge something to worry about in a later stage? It seems to me a lot more important th...
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...
AUG.
11
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Sea Rescue Story

Well, this has happened back in May, but I only heard about it recently - and I think it's a lovely story:

A sailing boat got into trouble at sea and sent out a distress call - which was answered by the Götheborg, a replica of an 18th century ocean-going sailing ship. They came to tow the smaller vessel to a safe harbour.

You can read more about both the Götheborg and the rescue operation on their website - it definitely is worth a visit, if you ask me!

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AUG.
10
1

Socks... or not... or yes.

A while ago, I started knitting the Semki socks -  and recently, I gave up on this project, and frogged them.

I had gotten a good bit up the shaft already, and then tried to try them on, just to realise that my heel won't fit through the very narrow leg part, and that my instep is way too high for the sock. So I ripped back to where the decreases start and adjusted, doing some kind of make-it-up-as-you-go-along changes to the pattern.

That was fun, and it sort of worked, and I ended up with a sock that would fit... but unfortunately, the variegated yarn and the pattern didn't go back to playing well together. I did like the wide stripes in the foot part, and had it turned back to this look after a bit of shenanigans for the transition between foot and leg, I'd have been fine. But this? 

Nah. Not really.

So I frogged the sock, and have since started the next try of sock-knitting - this time the "Basketcase Sock".  The last time I've done entrelac knitting was ages ago (and a project that I also frogged), but I really like the idea, and it was time to work on my backwards knitting skills too...

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AUG.
09
0

Conference Preparation.

A good part of today has been conference preparation -  both for the Textile Forum (planning things, mostly including madder - red seems to be the dye that stimulates a lot of research) and for the EAA in Belfast.

Conference prep in that regard included going through the session list and trying to figure out what I will be able to attend, and downloading the abstract book. Like in all huge conferences, there's a lot of things on offer. Or maybe I should say A LOT. Or, to be even more precise:

A LOT.

There's three days of conference sessions (August 31 to September 2), and there's so many of these that of course most of them are running in parallel. The abstract book and programme book are online now, and the abstract book has a whooping 1192 pages. I kid you not. Almost two thousand pages!

As you can well imagine, I will not be able to catch half of the things that sound really interesting to me. At least there's one time slot where I don't have any trouble at deciding what session to attend, and that's on September 2, where I'll be giving my own presentation in session 468...

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AUG.
08
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International Cat Day.

Today is, as I found out this morning, International Cat Day - taking place annually on August 8. And because that is the perfect excuse to not write a long blog post today, and instead delight you (well, hopefully) with a cat picture, here you go: 

Madame is, not surprisingly but still a little sadly, getting old. She's always had some food intolerances, but those got much more severe last year. After several months of searching for a possible cause, we did find out that it's probably the thickening additives in the canned cat food that she reacts to... and that ruled out about all kinds of available canned pet food (in combination with the kinds of meat she cannot have, there's about nothing left that would work for her).

So we switched to mixing her food ourselves, which means buying meat and adding in all the vitamins, minerals, and other things that are necessary to achieve the right amount of everything. Definitely not a low-maintenance cat - but she is much better now, having less issues with scratching herself, and also no more bad gut issues. The past few days, though, she seems to have hip pains :( and we hope that getting her some more aids to get onto her fave spots without jumping, and providing her with some nice warm spots, will help.

Growing old is not for cowards...

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AUG.
07
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Back from Summer Break!

Summer break is over - and with the weather in the last few days, it almost seems as if summer itself were over, too. We were lucky to have nice weather for our little holiday trip, though, when we went paddling down the Moselle river, with lots of vinyards to look at.

Taking a little break to stretch our legs... with the canoe waiting for us at the pontoon.

There were quite a lot of boats and ships on the river - freighters, river cruise ships, small sport motorboats, plus the medium-sized day-trip-cruise ships. Almost no paddlers, though. We had a very nice time and went home right before the weather turned bad (there was the forecast of thunderstorms and strong winds, both not really suited to canoeing). 

Now it's back to work, catching up on the things that have accumulated while I was on the break, and preparing for the upcoming exciting things, such as the EAA conference in Belfast (I have to finalise my presentation for this) and, of course, the European Textile Forum in November. So it's motivational hot drinks today (which, with the hard drop in temperatures, are quite welcome not only due to their motivational properties, but also due to their warmth) and, of course, getting started on sending out the orders that came in during the last weeks...

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JULI
07
1

Summer Break!

It's hot outside, it's warm inside, there already was an iced coffee after lunch today, and I will be off on summer break now. 

I'm planning to make the most of the next few weeks to relax and see friends and then sneakily catch up on stuff that has been neglected for too long. The website is freshly updated, all current orders have been sent out, the quarterly tax stuff is taken care of, cat food stock is large enough so Madame will not go hungry - it looks like I'm all set for the break. 

So I will leave you with this image of an ice cream that has stripes like a tunic with clavi... very summer-appropriate, I think.

I'll be back on the blog on August 7. Have a lovely summer! (Or winter, if you're in the other hemisphere...)

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JULI
06
0

Winding Down.

Summer break is almost upon me, and for a change, I am not frantically doing a hundred thousand things that have to be finished before the break - there's only one thing with a deadline left to take care of, but it's not a huge task, and two that should be taken care of but where it's not crucial to do it before the break, and otherwise I'm more or less set. Which is a nice change to some other years where I was really getting a bit of extra stress before the break... so it feels a bit like I'm winding down now, and that is very pleasant.

Which, mind you, does not mean there's not a lot that could be done. It's just that nothing will explode if I don't manage to do it before - and a lot of the other things are stuff on the "when I finally get around to it" that have been on said list for way longer than I'd like them to be anyways, so they are well used to waiting, and nothing bad will happen if they don't. But, after enough years of doing this job, I have come to realise that there are always things that would be so nice to do, or to have, or to start, or to make... and then there's something that does not line up, or stuff happens, and it's plainly not possible to do all the things one has ideas or plans for. Which is kind of sad, if you look at it one way, but on the other hand... imagine you only have so few ideas and plans and find so few things exciting or interesting that you get around to doing all of them? That would be a totally different, but at least as sad situation.

And to give you a picture, because they are nice, here's a complete non-sequitur that is not sad at all: 

This  is another case of a project that has eaten more time than initially planned - but oh, it has also delivered. I don't regret a single minute invested in the membrane gold thread project, as it brought me a lot of new knowledge, some new skills, a good amount of new contacts and pleasant time spent working together with wonderful people. 

And the result, as of now, is a method that would be absolutely workable for production. Plus some beautiful thread as the outcome - even though my skills in wrapping the membrane around the core are still not where they could be, it's gotten much better. There will be the EAA conference in Belfast at the end of August, where I'll do a little presentation about the project, and I am planning to do a bit more silver spinning before that. Overall, though - very, very content with the current state of things.

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JULI
05
0

Very Interesting Velvet.

Sorry for the unannounced blog silence yesterday - I was off on a field trip, and I had planned to blog on the journey in the train either going there or coming back, but both trips were spent doing other work-y things instead.  

It was a lovely trip, and it included a brief but intense visit to the BNM - where we had a look at the garments from a noble grave crypt in Lauingen, dating to the 17th century. The textiles are very well preserved, and they are rather spectacular due to a number of reasons - but what fascinated me most was the fabric used for the garments worn by Pfalzgraf Philipp Ludwig.

The fabric looks a little like a herringbone pattern fabric with a lot of bands sewn on - but it's woven in one piece, and the bands are a kind of uncut velvet, construction-wise. Here is a very bad close-up picture:

It is beautiful, and fascinating, and the three of us spent a good while in front of it trying to figure out how it might have been made. I'm again and again intrigued by the creativity used to make so, so many different kinds of fabrics...

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JULI
03
1

Cards in Bloom!

In the back of our garden, there's a few special thistle plants: Weaver's cards. They are quite similar to the wild card plants, but their heads are a little more cylindrical than conical, and a bit firmer.

And to my delight, they are now blooming: 

 It's not looking too spectacular, the flowers - but I think it fascinating how they start in the middle and then the flower strip, consisting of a lot of single small blossoms, goes both upwards and downwards.

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JUNI
30
0

Textile Finds from Late 16th Century Groningen

The Tudor Tailor is pondering the translation of Hanna Zimmerman's book about the Groningen textile finds "Textiel in Context". The finds date to the late 16th century, and they have been published in Dutch in a relatively small print run. The plan is to translate the text into English and supply new, better photographs of the objects in the translated version.

In case that sounds interesting for you, you can learn more about the project (and signal your interest in a survey) on the Tudor Tailor webpage here.

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