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onsdag 18 september 2013

Books


This summer I have purchased a few books. Some of you may know I worked as a librarian for forty years. Books are an essential part of my life. Even if I read lots of e-books and listen to audiobooks nowadays, I still want printed books also. To touch and feel a book is a great pleasure and a very tactile sensation.


"Keskiajan puvut" (Medieval dress) by Satu Hovi, Hannele Maahinen and Katri Niemi is a book I've wanted to have for years, if not decades, but never thought anyone would write. The book is a thorough guide for making you own medieval dress, for child, woman, and man. Tunics, gowns, dresses, nalbinded mittens, shoes, bands and cords, embroidery, details in the dress. I can't wait to find fabrics so I can start sewing!


Easy to copy patterns, and good photos. This one shows the typical bronze embroidery used in the medieval Finnish dress:



It was often used in hems, where it adds weight so the dress is easier to wear. We all know the Marilyn Monroe effect, don't we?

I have also bought a book I've been looking into for very long: "Ur textilkonstens historia" by Agnes Geijer. It's a thorough history of textile in the Western world since ancient times. I'm especially happy about the weaving section, as that is a field I know almost nothing about.


The book has been translated to English, "A History of Textile Art". The illustrations are typical for the time the first printing was published in 1972: adequate and clear, with many drawings. The printing from 2006 which I now own also has color photos. The pictures below foresee something that's coming into my life very soon:


Kasper likes books, here he's reading Elizabeth Wayland Barber's "Women's Work. The first 20.000 years". He was very interested in the picture of a woman spinning on a drop spindle, I couldn't make him move so I could take a photo. Sometimes I think he knows what he sees, because this is not the first time he's been looking at pictures of spindling women.



I also have Barber's "Prehistoric Textiles", that I like very much. "Women's Work" is an archaeological and sociological study of women's work with producing textiles, starting 20.000 years ago and ending in Classic Greece. The thoughts such a study gives you are overwhelming. So much work, so much struggle, and all done while taking care of your family and your house. It makes you shiver. My motto, "Not one day without thread", comes from reading books and studies like this one. The book is full of wonderful examples of how textiles have been made, and of the conditions during which the women worked.

Please give a thought to the women and children in the textile factories in India, China, Pakistan, and other countries where all the cheap clothes are made in our days.

And look here! Deborah Robson's and Carol Ekarius' "The Field Guide to Fleece"! This little book is a shorter version of "The Fleece & Fiber Source Book". It's meant to be exactly what it says, a field guide. Small enough to take along to fiber festivals, and sturdy enough to be thrown into your back pack together with cameras, phones, snacks, knittings, drink bottles, and spindles. The book is bound, and glued strongly enough to for rough handling (= you can open it without fearing it'll fall into pieces!) The paper is glossy, of a thick high quality, so you can't very easily tore it.


The text is of the kind we've been spoiled with from FFSB: interesting, informative, easy to read. For each breed the authors give suggestions for use, and they also tell how the wool takes dyes. The order is alphabetical, so it's easy to find what you're looking for. The photos make you want to purchase the wools immediately, and start spinning. Here's one Deb's favorite wools:


The book loving dog and the new books about textile:


Oh yes, two more books coming my way this autumn :) Kasper may have a look at them also.

tisdag 21 juni 2011

The Fleece & Fiber Sourcebook


Oh how I have been waiting for this book! I pre-ordered it from Amazon in January, and they promised to ship it i June. Then they changed the shipping date once, and then once again, so I canceled it and turned to Book Depository. They shipped it at once :)

I haven't had time to read the book yet, but I have looked through it. It's a beautiful book. Clear and interesting lay out, very good paper, easy to read (I don't know what the font is, but it's beautiful and clear). I love the photos. I don't know if you've read Deb's blog, but I read the postings about the photo sessions with great interest. You can almost touch the fibers, yarns and swatches.

I do believe the text is as good and informative as the photos. I already know this will be my new fiber and sheep reference book.

I'm off to UK to see Sarah, Malin and Tini, and probably Chris too, so see you after that adventure! Will be back next Thursday. Hubby stays home with the dog, hopefully taking care of the flowers :)

tisdag 2 november 2010

British Sheep and Wool

A new book about sheep and wool is a happy event: British Sheep and Wool

Paying for it is a bit laborious right now, but The British Wool Marketing Board is working on getting PayPal, so if you're not in a hurry it will be easier later.