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26 February 2008

Thought into action

Amid the changing BC weather, we have some good sunrises here. I've been photographing them, the sky orange beyond the blue mountains and the mist rolling through the black shapes of cedars, over the fields of red-stemmed blueberry bushes.

This morning brought a slash of orange among the rapidly shifting grey clouds. I caught myself thinking "if I had my paints here, I'd have a go at that" - and realised that I did have one tube of paint and could have a go.
ok, it sure ain't art - but it's more valuable than the photographs, because some prolonged looking and thinking, and interaction, is involved.

Crafty reading

Before bookstores had cafes, and certainly before "search inside" a book online, there were libraries. For no money, you could read all the books you wanted, in the comfort of your home, and didn't have to find space for storing all those books.

The bright blue bookmobile, similar to this one, that appeared every two weeks was a central point of my childhood. Herman Sherman and the library lady let me take home as many books as I could carry, and over the two weeks I'd usually get through them all. (Ah, the vast acres of empty hours of interminable childhood!)

Now that tiny little Pitt Meadows has become a built up suburb, among the shopping centres is the library, a treasure chest including new-to-me Canadian authors, and magazines that can be borrowed. Time for thoughtfully choosing books was limited on that first visit, but I couldn't resist taking "A knitting mystery" home -- unfortunately, a little went a long way, for example on p3:"Kelly turned to see Burt Palmer, retired cop and now spinner par excellence, grinning as he carried a huge bag of multicolored fleeces into the adjacent room."

Much more promising in terms of literary quality and discerning use of "technical details", and one I'll order on the internet, is The Girl who Stopped Swimming, which has an art quilter as the central character.

Meanwhile, I have a jolly book bag as a souvenir of all my years of using the Fraser Valley Regional Library.And the library has a "bestseller express" corner - 7 day loan, $1 a day overdue fine - where I found this and liked the cover:The central character is a book conservator, and the scene jumps to various historical periods, tracing the history of the manuscript and of the people involved with it. All very thoroughly researched, to the point of overload methinks. I was amused to read of the heroine taking a cab from Hampstead to Westminster because there wouldn't be time to do the journey by underground - even though the congestion charge now makes traffic less gridlocked, going by tube would probably be a better option; on the other hand, Hampstead is on the notorious Northern Line....l

16 February 2008

Family dinner

Cooking up a storm -The table set for 12 -
The menu was lentil and cumin chili/curry; Bombay potatoes; cashew chicken; various raitas and chutney; rice. The wine flowed freely. Ice cream (with chocolate sauce) followed eventually.

15 February 2008

Brothers

Alfred and Paul raise their glasses -and are still smiling the morning after --

One ball short of a ...

Is there enough yarn to finish the cardigan for my dad? The body is done, sewn together, fitted; one sleeve is 3/4 done, the other half done - and there's not a lot of the green wool left (lots of grey left - and I've even found some buttons).
The choices are (a) take it back to the UK, get more wool there and knit the tops of the sleeves there, then mail it to him; (b) rip back the body to just below the armholes and make it a couple of inches shorter, freeing up enough wool to finish the sleeves (maybe); and (c) phone all over town for one ball of wool - fortunately I used an internationally-available brand, and there's a listing of all the yarn shops in BC, indeed in Canada, here.

13 February 2008

"Painted" wool

This wonderful, extremely fine wool looks quite different off the skein, wound into a ball -- and different again when knitted. Because of all the colour changes in the wool you don't need a fancy pattern - but you do need a bit more than "just plain". This has evolved into a "pointy" scarf (3 in the 72 stitches) - the first 15" has used about half the wound-up wool, which means that in 2010 or 2012 when the scarf is eventually finished it will be about 60" (1m60) long. Unless the moths get to it first, that is.

10 February 2008

Practical sewing

First it was aprons for everyone on my Christmas list -
Now I'm sewing a wardrobe of hospital gowns for a special person.
There are many "community quilt" projects (eg Linus quilts for children in hospital), but I've not heard of a project for making pretty gowns for patients in longterm care. Yet they would be a morale booster for bedridden patients. The gowns are quick to make, take only 2 metres of fabric, and have scope for simple and effective embellishment.

Scary thought?

"Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your mind off your goals." - Henry Ford
Some people, though, see obstacles as opportunities.

09 February 2008

What to do with sleeves

Traditional garments often have big sleeves - which surely got in the way when there was work to be done. This print by Utamaro shows how to tie kimono sleeves out of the way -The long sleeves on central Asian coats weren't a problem because the coats were worn over the head, "for best" (but just try to find a picture of this! Or even a decently large photo!) [but see the Update below]
whereas the long sleeves of Palestinian costume were tied together behind the back when there was work to be doneThroughout the ages, sleeves have been rolled up
In China, sleeve protectors are worn - even by students


Update, Feb 2017

With the proliferation of pinterest, it's no longer difficult to find a photo of a traditional central Asian coat being worn the traditional way -

This site shows lots and lots of traditional central Asian garments.


Images of Palestinian traditional dress abound -
(via)


07 February 2008

The values of craft

"It's certainly possible to get by in life without dedication, but the craftsman exemplifies the special human condition of being engaged."Richard Sennet's new book, The Craftsman, is getting a lot of media coverage, in the Guardian and the Telegraph, for a start. The quote comes from the Guardian's review, and is one of the "problems" with craftsmanship - the selfish pursuit of excellence, with disregard for market forces.

His notion of craft is more than the 19th century idea of working with your hands - it's the desire to do something well for its own sake, to become skilled, to develop competence. The book starts with the example of a Linux programmer, not a carpenter among wood shavings. It's a different way of understanding things - going over and over them - practising.

Another problem with craftsmanship is the class divide - being a "worker" has long been seen as demeaning. The competence that craftsmen aim for and exemplify is invisible to people at the top; workmanship isn't valued. Sennet says (paid) work should be structured so that workers build up competence -- good idea!

"Competence and engagement - the craftsman's ethos - appear to be the most solid source of adult self-respect, according to many studies conducted in Britain and the US." Let's get practising.

Seasonal delights

Valentines cookies in seasonal heart shapes, with seasonally coloured sprinkles -and two-bite cupcakes (vanilla or chocolate) with seasonally pink icing -
and of course the seasonal chocolates in their heart-shaped boxes (check out the one with the leather jacket, centre bottom) and the seasonally fluffy toys

06 February 2008

Fabric shopping

It was great to be in a real fabric store, with bolts of cloth as far as the eye could see, a pattern counter, notions section, helpful staff...Among the flannelette and lightweight cottons I found these for hospital gowns (on consideration, not the lime green one on the right) --
And this one for myself --

Classic

Temptation - 85 cents each at the Salvation Army thrift store on Lougheed Highway in Maple Ridge, BC. Is it true that the instructions were so much better, back then?

Ikat at the V&A

The exhibition of Central Asian ikats is on until 30 March. It lifts the spirits. (I went to see it back in January, with some others from CQ.)
On the left, a man's robe; the woman's robe on the right has more shaping. They're lined with printed cotton imported from Russia and England, among other places. The ikat fabric is silk (dyed) threads covering a cotton warp. The silk is tied and dyed up to seven times, and has to be spread out in groups of long threads and marked up before each dyeing. The white areas have to be carefully guarded!

This darker robe might have been worn by a woman in mourning. Ikat cloth was also made into wall hanging, lined again in cotton.
Most garments in the exhibition are from 1875-1900, but there are also some more modern ones - with simpler designs and chemical dyes.
My favourite - these simple circles. The white ones have red dye at the sides of the green circles in the centre.
The woven panels are narrow and patterns don't necessarily "match". And what's that white, wavy line?

Bambi says hello

But whose tracks are these?

04 February 2008

Quote of the day

"Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves." - Carl Jung

Interesting thought - and now, how to illustrate it? Googling "irritation" came up with, among the inflamed skin and patent medicines, this nostalgic image, touting the throat-soothing qualities of cigarettes - (How wrong they were!)

Winter wonderland

Snow in Pitt Meadows isn't as unusual as snow in London, but as it had already been around for nearly a week when we arrived, I didn't expect a fresh fall while we were here. These views are from the kitchen window and front door, looking back towards the peat bog, most of which is now planted in blueberries or cranberries.
The Golden Ears look fabulous in the sunlight, with their frosting of fresh snow.
(The camera has developed intermittent floaters again; I don't have software to clean up the pix.)

02 February 2008

Some Canadian history

In Canada as in the US, people of Japanese origin were sent to internment camps during the second world war - "a black mark on the history of a nation that prides itself on its ethnic diversity, its tolerance and its multicultural policies", says the Japanese Canadian history website.

In the BC lower mainland, the main Japanese communities were on Powell Street in downtown Vancouver, and the fishing village of Steveston. There's a Japanese History Museum in Burnaby; hope to be able to visit it; the cannery museum in Steveston isn't open in winter. But it's possible to read more about it.
School photographs in the museum in the little farming town (as it was then) of Pitt Meadows show several Japanese children in the years before the war, but none afterward. After the war Japanese Canadians were encouraged to move east of the Rockies.

In 1949 all restrictions were lifted and Japanese Canadians were given full citizenship rites, including the vote. They were allowed to return "home" but their property had been seized and sold off long ago.

After reading David Gutterson's Snow Falling on Cedars, I was interested to visit the town of Greenwood (pop.200, then), where 1200 Japanese were sent. A hotel used for internment has a commemorative plaque; many families on each floor would be sharing limited cooking and sanitary facilities. Other buildings were adapted in the same way.
At first many men were sent to work in road camps; some families stayed together by working on sugar beet farms in Alberta, where labour was in short supply. Anyone who resisted internment was rounded up by the RCMP and sent to a barbed-wire prisoner-of-war camp in Ontario. We didn't learn about this when I was in school, but it's taught now.

Designer and artist Norman Takeuchi has made full-sized kimono out of paper, named after internment camps; here's Slocan:

01 February 2008

Wired

This "tied wire sculpture" is by American artist Ruth Asawa. She was one of the 120,000 Japanese-Americans held in internment camps during World War 2, and it was there at the age of 16 she had the chance to study with some professional artists who were also interned. Thereafter she won a scholarship to Black Mountain College and studied with Josef Albers, who encouraged experimentation with common materials. She learned to crochet with wire while studying basketmaking in Mexico, and considers her sculptures to be three-dimensional drawings. She lives in San Francisco and has done many fountains - some based on origami and some modelled with flour dough and then cast in bronze.

Thanks to Pam RuBert on Ragged Cloth Cafe for the introduction to this artist. She exemplifies the continuum of art and life.