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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...
JAN.
20
0

Hooray, Friday!

That week has flown by, somehow. Well, most of the last two days was gobbled up by the website migration, and there's still a chunk of issues to fix - though I managed to get one or the other already. Like this totally not helpful huge floating image of the basket when you're shopping. Or trying to shop on your mobile phone.

The intention behind this was to have a nice, accessible way to get to the shopping cart or basket or however you want to call it from anywhere inside the shop. So I made this medium-pretty basket image at one point (and there was the idea of replacing it, at some time, with a more medieval-style basket image, but, well, things happened) and inserted it to float at the top of the screen.

Which it does. Unfortunately, with the changed layout of the responsive design, on small screens it blows itself up to maximum size and is not helpful for shopping in peace and quiet anymore... due to overlaying most of the shop. As a customer, that would really annoy me. (Have I mentioned that running my own webshop has made me much more mellow in regard to things not working properly in other webshops? At least partly. Some things annoy me even more now.)

Fortunately, that was rather easy to solve - I just forbid it to display below a certain screen width. Whew.

Other things are not quite as easy; a lot of stuff has changed with the transition to the new major version, and now I have to find old files with my changes again, find out where the new files that have the same info in them are living now, and adapt the new files. There are also issues with changed (and thus broken) links, and the necessity to set up redirects for those. So the list of tasks to do is currently still growing - and I am looking forward to the point where it will shrink again!

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JAN.
19
0

Website Migration!

It was time again for a website update... Joomla (the system that this whole thing here is running on) has a new major version, and now finally everything that I need is available for the next version, so it was high time to finally get cracking on it. And I'll just have to find replacements for anything that is not working anymore, which, hopefully, is not much.

I did some test runs and prep work back a good while ago, and I made notes, so I didn't have to figure out everything from scratch (thank goodness!). Doing prep work like that is quite nice, but of course it's never a guarantee that it will work fully the next time around. (Migration of the Textile Forum website already happened when I was last at it, so I've also gotten in a tiny bit of practise with the new system, but it's still fairly awkward in some regards.)

Usually, I do these migration preparations on an installation on my computer right here, but this time around I've had some issues installing stuff on localhost, so it was a test site right on the server. This meant I had to be a little careful about extra backups (as my server space is limited, and the site is quite large), but on the upside, it means that testing is easier and more reliable, and once things are all done and set and running, I only need to change a path to have the new site up. Which has happened about 2 minutes ago, and presto! I was switched over faster than I realised.

So. I hope now that everything was tested sufficiently yesterday and today, and that things will work out without too many issues. Which, potentially, include unwanted design changes in the main site, in the shop, and other glitches there. If you notice anything, please do let me know! 

There will be some layout and design tweaking in the shop in the next days, as the layout I had and preferred was shot by the last larger update of the shop software. Ah, the endless joys of websites and their shenanigans. (To be honest, though, I quite like most of the website work, for a change. I wouldn't want to do it every day, but it is rather nice to be able to tweak things, or take care of some issue myself.)

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JAN.
12
0

New Year, New Adventures.

I'm back from the winter break - and ready for the next year to start off properly, and for new adventures. There's a stack of things already in planning, and to my great delight, I have managed to catch up on a few things in the meantime.

One reason why my breaks (both in winter and in summer) may seem rather long is that I'm not relaxing and taking time off all the time - there's also a good amount of behind-the-scenes things going on during these weeks. For the end of the old year and start of the new, these include a lot of paperwork. New numbers for the invoices, book-keeping for the end of the year, doing the tax paperwork. That, for me, always means quite a bit of checking, as VAT has to be paid for the last quarter, then I double-check if I have caught everything during the year (sometimes a receipt slips past and turns up after its accountancy period), then the car costs have to be figured in. Why the car costs? Well, it's the company's car, and due to German legislation that means if I use it for private purposes, it counts as income and I have to pay VAT on that. So that's another thing to book...

The good thing is: Once that's all finished, there is not a lot more left to do for filing the "proper" taxes, as in the income taxes, which have to be paid on top of the VAT. And this year I've managed to finish all the paperwork and tax prep work in the winter break, which is a very nice thing. It always gives me a good feeling to have sent off the last quarter's VAT, and have all the books in order.

The next step was taking stock of things in stock, and replenishing where necessary. That's mostly done, too, with a few items still on the waitlist because the suppliers are busy, or there's issues with raw materials, or other reasons out of my own control. But having sorted that means I can now take care of orders that came in during the break.

And then... planning. Plans for this year include a reprint of my Gold Embroidery book (that sold out during the last year), there's two articles about tablet weaving coming up in two different places, and I might be travelling to Lübeck again in spring for some more collaboration with the ever-lovely Hansemuseum.

The next European Textile Forum will be in Mayen once again, with a focus on dyeing - the date is not fixed yet, but hopefully will be rather soon. 

What has a fixed date, though, are the next in-person workshops I will be giving. 

First up, from February 3 to February 5: A selection of workshops at the "Historischer Nähtreff" at Burg Rothenfels, near Würzburg. I'll be offering a number of workshops: Hand sewing (medieval seams and stitches), historical spinning, sprang (which is braiding in a frame) and fingerloop braiding as well as weaving on a bow loom. If you're interested, here's more information, including how to register:


The second one is a big tablet-weaving workshop taking place in Tüchersfeld, in the stunningly beautiful Franconian Switzerland. That is going to take a full weekend, enabling us to cover tablet-weaving from the basics up to weaving patterns based on diagonals, freestyle, no pattern draft required. The course will be in German, and if you're interested and free on March 3-5, book your spot here.

Examples for diagonal-based patterns... they are just as fun to weave as they are beautiful to look at. Well, at least that's my opinion!

Apart from that, I have some tasks left on my list from last year - such as finishing off the website migration, and some writing tasks are to be done as well. Which means the new year has started off nicely, and promises to not be boring at all! 

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DEZ.
20
0

Workshops Next Year!

I'm utterly delighted that there will be workshops next year - one set at the Nähtreffen Rothenfels, which is running for the 5th time now, and the tablet weaving workshop in Tüchersfeld.

Rothenfels will take place in February, from Friday 3 to Sunday 5. I have a number of workshops on the list, including the sewing introduction and sprang braiding - and there's other workshops as well, plus there will be music, and good company, and lots of fun hanging out with nice people. I'm very much looking forward to it already.

If everything works as it should, you can read more about it in the pdf on the right, which also contains information on how to register for the event.

The tablet weaving workshop is in March in the Fränkische Schweiz-Museum Tüchersfeld, on Friday 3 to Sunday 5. We'll cover tablet weaving from the basics to free pattern weaving with diagonals - and in some cases, participants in this course even proceeded on to the basics of 3:1 broken twill weaving, also without a pattern.  

The workshop can be booked via the museum website; the price includes materials and lunch on Saturday and Sunday.

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DEZ.
19
2

How on earth did they do it?

If you're looking at medieval embroideries, you will, sooner or later, stumble across one that has been embellished with pearls. Seed pearls. As in tiny, miniscule specimens of pearls, smaller than anything you will easily get today. (Or get at all, in some cases.)

A while ago, I was looking for a source for pearls to do embroidery medieval style, but to no avail. The company that I found which in theory offered small pearls (with a diameter of 1 to 1.5 mm, as that's the size we're talking about) told me, on my inquiry, that they don't have pearls that small at all, and if they had, nobody would be able to drill a hole into them.

That was done, however. I'm wondering, together with a lot of other people, how medieval and early modern and modern people managed to drill holes into pearls so small that it seems you can hardly see them. With techniques possible in the Middle Ages...

To give you an idea of the tinyness of these things, compare the size of these seed pearls to the size of the modern glass-headed pin:

They are utterly, utterly tiny, and if anyone has an idea of how the holes might have gotten into these pearls, or how they may have been strung up, or sewn to a textile (these haven't, of course, but others did) they would be more than welcome! 

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DEZ.
16
0

Slowing Down.

The year is winding down, and while there's a list of things still to do before 2022 ends, there's only one larger and hard-deadlined item left on the list, with a "finish before winter break" tag on it. That is a really, really nice thing... and I very much enjoy the feeling of winding down and slowing down a bit too.

The one item? I have (not too foolishly, I hope) agreed to write a little article about tablet weaving. It's actually two, but one is finished, and there's only one left to do... so I've made some photos, and something vaguely resembling a plan, and there's an outline, and hopefully there's an article soon.

The really fascinating thing about this is that every time I look at the topic, there's another little aspect that I can see. Especially when I try to explain something, or describe something. This sharpens the eye in a way that nothing else does. There's a German idiom that more or less says "you learn when you teach", and that is really true. (Well, provided that when you teach, you try to explain things so that the audience understands them, and not just teach the motions and rules to be learned by heart and followed... because then, you will learn nothing.)

For the tablet weavers among you: The two middle images show the same setup and were woven the same way - only on top, the tablets are threaded alternatingly s and z, and on the bottom, all are threaded the same way. Like all of you, I know that the s and z are important and will change how the black and white line up. But I still find it amazing how much the alternate threading changes the line-up and the optical impression of the band. 

0
DEZ.
08
1

Blogiversary!

It's hard to believe, but it's blogiversary day again. And, even harder to believe, I am actually remembering to write about it on the very day itself!

Back when I started this, in 2008, I started out writing on the blogspot platform, and stayed there until 2015 - which was when I made a new website on Joomla, pulling everything together in one spot. 

There's been a lot of writing over the years, and there's been a lot of years since 2008. This blog is turning 14 today. FOURTEEN. Please excuse me while I am not believing this for a while. 

I've tried to find out how long the average lifespan of a blog is, and it seems to be somewhere around 3-4 years, but that's from an older blogpost... somewhere. Anyway, I think everything over ten years makes any blog some kind of dinosaur. In a similar line of thought, these days, I sometimes feel like I'm very old-fashioned, still doing a blog, while so many others have switched to (mostly) Instagram, or are on tictoc (I am so old I haven't even visited that yet), or somewhere that I haven't even heard of. While I'm also on Instagram, the blog is still my main thing. It's easier to search through the old entries than Instagram is, and for the instances that I feel like writing a lot, it's better suited to that.

Though admittedly, a lot of the entries are short, and sometimes it feels like I've written about everything at least once. From time to time, that means I sort of run out of steam, and wonder about whether I should stop or not - but then there's this link or that interesting article or something I feel like I need to rant about, and on it goes.

And then, from time to time, I get an utterly nice email telling me that someone stumbled across this blog, and found so many interesting things there... which always makes my day, and is the best reason for me to carry on a while longer. So there we go.


Blogiversary! Coffee and chocolate for celebration!  

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