Rebecca Osborn’s bluestocking summer
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Rebecca Osborn’s bluestocking summer
Read Morethe “everlasting stocking knitters” of Wales
Read Morecontemporary bluestockings, Mimi and Gloria Onyekwere
Read MoreIntroducing a talented designer and her fascinating professional journey
Read MoreIntroducing wise and generous Aoife Mc Lysaght
Read MoreIntroducing talented Scottish-Pakistani weaver, Mariam Syed
Read MorePhilippe Mercier’s popular portrait of an eighteenth-century stocking knitter
Read MoreCelebrating the work of a trailblazing black British woman writer
Read MoreCelebrating brilliant knitters around the world for international women’s day
Read MoreThis is the second in my series of posts about the Applied Arts Scotland / British Council residency I took part in last September, and the collaborative work I’m now developing as a result. After leaving Lewis, and returning to the mainland, our group met up with superlatively creative and enabling Lynne Hocking-Mennie, and with…
Read MoreThe Five Sisters window in York Minster is dedicated to all 1,513 women of the British Empire who lost their lives serving in the First World War. The existing 13th century window was restored and rededicated with funds raised by public appeal, and unveiled on 24 June 1925. Image: © John Scurr (WMR-30648), Imperial War…
Read MoreHello again, it’s Tom here with my latest update on the People Make Glasgow photo-documentary project. In today’s post it is my huge pleasure to introduce to you the Soul Food Sisters. The Soul Food Sisters are an all-female, multicultural, not-for-profit food collective. Established in 2013, this group of women are chefs on a social…
Read MoreAs we approach the start of Knitting Season, I thought I’d write a few posts about how I use (and have used) journals. I imagine many of us think about journals as deeply personal spaces, and yet my most formative experience of journal keeping was collective and not individual. (Because this story belongs to others…
Read MoreHello, here is my new hair, and my new cardigan. For quite a while it has been obvious (to me at least) that my hair was no longer naturally brown, but grey. I got to a point a few months ago when I was just tired of the continual touching up. What might my hair…
Read MoreOver the years I’ve gathered a small collection of knitting ephemera. This includes a few different styles of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century sticks, wisps and sheaths (used throughout Britain for supported knitting) and different kinds of representations–largely photographs or prints–of knitting all over Britain. Such representations do not afford some sort of transparent window onto…
Read MoreI’ve recently been writing about teaching my left hand to work again following my stroke. Because of this, I’ve been thinking very carefully about braiding hair, and knitting socks, about how it felt, and what it meant to re-instruct my hand (whose memory of habitual movement had been completely lost) in those activities. I’ve also…
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