Showing posts with label homemaking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label homemaking. Show all posts

18 October 2014

Readying for Winter

At this time of year in the Northern Hemisphere, the weather can be changeable, with 'Indian Summer' - warm days and cold nights, hot one day and cold the next, snow, rain, or humidity all in one week in some areas. However, this is a perfect time to get one's house and wardrobe - and that of the family - ready for winter.


Mrs. Beeton, in her Book of Household Management says, 'In September and October it will be necessary to prepare for the cold weather, and get ready the winter clothing for the various members of the family. The white summer curtains will now be carefully put away, the fire-places, grates, and chimneys looked to, and the house put in a thorough state of repair.'

For our purposes, this is the time to rotate the linens, from summer cottons and coverlets to winter flannels and quilts. The former will want a wash, and the latter an airing, before being laid away in herbs to protect the beautiful starching from vermin, or to be laid upon the beds. Carefully examine the household linen, with a view to its being repaired, if necessary, before cleaning or airing.

Woolens likewise can be freshened, being well shaken and brushed, after being taken out of their pinning upon paper or linen, and camphor (to keep them from moths.) This is true for knitwear as well as cloth.

If your find that you are in need of knitwear or fashionable winter Artistic dress  now is the time to make them, or seeing to having items made, so to be ready for the first really cold days.

Sprucing up a pair of boots:
A lovely quilted winter bonnet:


Stylish Knitwear:



24 August 2014

Compendium and classes!

For those of you who make your own items, you will be delighted as I was to find The Sharpe Compendium Shops - which lists shops that cater to the re-enactor, LARP, or cosplay communties. There are some familiar names among them, Wm. Booth, Draper, Nehelenia Patterns,  Smoke and Fire Company, Alter Years, Jas. Townsend and Son, Inc., The Staymaker ... It's a feast for the bluestocking in one!

For those of you who do not yet make your own items, but would wish to do so, we are offering courses in Historical Fine Hand-Sewing and Embroidery. The Handsewing Course is $150; the Embroidery Course is $300.

The Handsewing Course consists of Three PDF Lesson packages with materials (muslin, needles, thread) and instructions. The First Lesson consists of basic stitches (running, backstitch, whip, pin stitch) and seams (plain, felled, and whipped) and seam finishes, as well as historical commentary on the use of such methods

The Second Lesson involves the construction of pleats, ruffles, gauging and cartridge pleating, and tucks, as well as working with and finishing curved seams, French seams, and plain hemming. It concludes with historical commentary on the use of such methods, and study resources.

The Third Lesson progresses to fancy hems, faggoted seams, buttonholes of various sorts and the making of buttons. Period techniques such as simple needlelace, Dorset buttons, covered buttons and round buttons are included. Methods of attaching linings, piping and cording are an optional bonus.
Historical commentary on the use of such methods, and study resources accompany this final section.

Self tests are enclosed with the packets, and I am available to answer questions via email or the Workshops Page here.
At the end of the course, you can expect to have an artisan-level skill that, with practise, you can use for pleasure and profit.

By comparison, to get such a course from the Embroiderers' Guild, one would have to
      * Be a Member - $60
      * Pay for each Lesson - $150
      * Purchase the materials  - $20

The Embroidery Course consists of five PDF Lessons with materials (linen, hoop, needles, embroidery cotton, wool, beads and spangles) and instructions. The First Lesson consists of basic stitches (cross stitches, double running, algerian eye, Queen stitch, Irish stitch) as well as historical commentary on the use of such methods. It results in a working band sampler of the 17th Century mode for your future reference.

The Second Lesson progresses to surface stitches for both silk (or cotton) and wool (crewel). It includes advice on choosing colourways and methods of shading. It concludes with historical commentary on the use of such methods, and study resources. It results in a working spot sampler of the 17th Century mode for your future reference.

The Third Lesson encompasses whitework, including cutwork (reticella, broderie anglaise), drawn work, pulled work, Ayshire sprigging, casalguidi, and needlelace. It concludes with historical commentary on the use of such methods, and study resources. It results in working spot samplers of the 17th Century mode for your future reference.

The Fourth Lesson consists of quilting methods; flat quilting, patchwork, cording, trapunto, whole cloth and subdued crazy patch.  Included is historical commentary on the use of such methods, and study resources. It results in quilt samples of the 18th and 19th Century modes for your future reference.

The Fifth Lesson has two options:
1) padded work ('stumpwork') and the use of gold, beads, and spangles. This was the piece de resistance of a young lady's 17th Century needlework education. Stitches used are surface embroidery, trapunto, needlelace, cutwork and pulled work. Historical commentary on the use of such methods and study resources are included. It results in a decorative piece which may be used in the traditional manner to cover a box lid, or framed.

2) painted surface embroidery picture. This was the pride of an early 19th Century young lady's needlework education. It consists of a memorial or sentimental scene, drawn with painted elements - such as the sky, with the details of the picture needle-painted with finely detailed and shaded surface stitching. Historical commentary on the use of such methods and study resources are included. It results in a decorative piece which may be framed and given as a gift, in the traditional manner.

Self tests are enclosed with the packets, and I am available to answer questions via email or the Workshops Page here.
At the end of the course, you can expect to have an artisan-level skill that, with practise, you can use for pleasure and profit.

By comparison, to get such a course from the Embroiderers' Guild, one would have to
      * Be a Member - $60
      * Pay for each Lesson - $250
      * Purchase the materials  - $100











 


09 February 2011

Radical Homemakers: Reclaiming Domesticity from a Consumer Culture

Rush out NOW and read this book.
EVERYTHING that Shannon advocates for in Radical Homemakers is what I've been about since I was 14 years old. Everything. It is downright amusing that a radical sociology book about taking back the home can make me CRY. But it does.

I feel validated for everything I have ever believed and striven for. And she describes the three stages of the process, and I can agree with her conclusion that if one spends too long in Step Two that one becomes subject to the kind of depression and futility that Betty Friedan wrote so passionately against.

She also argues against the wife-mother as chauffeur car culture that arose after the Second World War - which was totally foisted on us by the corporations. We are not here to drive our children from this and that or to buy this or that for the husband and 'the house'! That is not our role in life! But we have been pressurised into that role. Unless we rebel...

=) Here's to rebellion! and making a real home.

Viz:
Renouncing: increasingly aware of the illusory happiness of a consumer society. Recognise and question the compulsion to purchase goods and services that they feel they could provide for themselves 'if only...'

Reclaiming: Recovering many skills that enable one to build a life without a conventional income. This phase can take a few years or a lifetime and will perpetually be returned to as one builds ever more skills. If dwelt only in this phase for too long begin to manifest symptoms of Friedan's housewife's syndrome - 'what's all this for?'

Rebuilding: Take on genuine creative challenges, engagement with community, make significant contributions toward rebuilding a new society that reflects one's vision of a better world, through artwork, writing, farming, fine craftwork, social reform, activism, teaching, or a small business.

'The choice to become homemakers is not an act of submission or family servitude. It is an act of social transformation.... it is time we come to think of our hoes as living systems. Like sourdough starter, the home's survival requires constant attention. A true home pulses with nonhuman life - vegetable patches, yeast, backyard hens, blueberry bushes, culturing yoghurt, fermenting wine and sauerkraut, brewing beer, milk goats, cats, dogs, houseplants, kids' science projects, pet snakes and strawberry patches...'