Christmas Meeting and End of Year Show

Join us for our Christmas Event and bring along items that you have made for us to admire.

In addition there are a few prizes to win.  These are as follows:

Kennedy Cup for Spinning

Complete an item of your choice which was completed in 2023 using appropriately spun fibres, together with a record of your workings and a skein of the spun yarn.

Lore Youngmark Memorial Prize for Weaving: Stripes

This is open to broad interpretation using any form of weaving equipment or number of shafts, from very simple to complex.  The stripes may be in the warp or weft or both and based on colour, structure, yarn contrast etc. This must be a complete item accompanied by weaving notes, inspiration, yarn and sett details.

The Gwen Shaw Cup for Design: Climate Change

This is a broad theme and can include the impact of climate chnage as well as your response to it.  The submission must include a description of the impact, what inspired you to create your piece and how it translates to your finished piece.

NEW Guild Tapestry Weaving Category: A Walk in Nature

Taking inspriation from nature in your garden or local parks, create a design suitable for tapestry using two techniques of your choice, eg Soumak and pick and pick.  Provide a description and evidence of your design process.

Wild Weaving Workshop with Ruby Taylor of Native Hands

Have you ever wanted to make a basket or vessel out of plants from your garden or foraged on your walk?  Yhen this workshop will inspire and teach you how to do this.  Ruby Taylor is an artist/make and educator bassed in Sussex (nativehands.co.uk)  Her practice is materials led, using plant fibres and clay.  Inspired by working with natural materials foraged from woods, hedgerows and the land, Ruby processes and creates functional and creative pieces.  She has a wealth of experience nd heritage knowledge.

All the materials required are included as they had to have been harvested in the summer, then prepared the night before the course.  The participants will learn about what leaves they can harvest for themselves in future.  However, if you have collected any iris or day lily leaves during the summer and dried them, do bring them along with you.

This workshop is only open to Guild Members.  There only 10 available places so early booking is essential.

Please contact Juliette on prcoiled baskets Ruby Taylor Native Handsogramme@londonguildofweavers.org.uk

Mudlarking & Heritage Craft Day Southwark Cathedral

Join us at the Heritage Craft Day at Southwark Cathedral where we will be demonstrating Spinning, Weaving, Tapestry Weaving and Natural plant dyeing.  We would love to see you  The entrance Fee to the Cathedral is £3.50 each and £8.00 per family (under 7’s free) unless of course you are part of one of our demonstration teams when It will be free of charge.

It is going to be a really great day with all the heritage crafts on offer

 

https://cathedral.southwark.anglican.org/whats-on/mudlarking-and-heritage-craft-day

Monthly Guild Meeting – Open Day

Free Entry

Would you like to learn more about fibre spinning, plant dyeing, weaving or tapestry and just want to give it a try before embarking on a new skillset?  We would love you to come along so our Guild members can show you their work and what is entailed in their crafts.  The Centre is  only a short walk from Clapham Junction station.

In addition we are holding two paid for workshops which give a more in depth knowledge into both plant dyeing and tapestry weaving ,which can be booked through Eventbrite

Natural Dye Taster Workshop

£15.00 pp  4 places available

If you are interested in a more hands on experience with natural dyes you can join our Natural Dye taster workshop. In this workshop you will learn how to extract dye from plant material, experience how different fibres take up dye and see the difference in colour when a mordant is used.   All materials and dyes are supplied.

This can be booked through Eventbrite

Tapestry Workshop

2.00 – 4.00 pm

£15.00 pp 10 places available

Try your hand at Tapestry Weaving.  Looms and materials are supplied which you can take home to either finish your creative art or start another one with your new skills.  You can learn how to create shapes and play with colour and textures with a variety of fibres.

This can be booked through Eventbrite.

This is now fully booked

Monthly Guild Meeting: Robbie LaFleur on Norwegian Tapestry: Research On and Off the Loom

robbie lafleur 2robbie LaFleur1QR Code Robbie Lafleur

Robbie LaFleur has been following a thread of Scandinavian textile research ever since attending weaving school in Fagernes, Norway, in In this lecture she will discuss traditional Norwegian tapestry, known as billedvev, or ”picture weaving”, which enjoyed a golden age in Norway from approximately 1600-1750. Learn what typifies Norwegian tapestry, and how it continued to influence Norwegian weavers in the 1900s and up to today.

LaFleur was a fellow with the American Scandinavian Foundation in 2019 and traveled to Stavanger, Norway, to study the open warp wool transparency technique of Frida Hansen (1855-1931). The famous Art Nouveau tapestry weaver began her career during the National Romantic era, working to revive traditional weaving techniques and using historical motifs and symbols. Hansen’s personal style evolved, with international Art Nouveau, Arts and Crafts, and Japanese influences. in addition to her monumental art tapestries, Frida Hansen developed a technique of open warp wool transparencies, used primarily as portieres, or door hangings.

Join Robbie LaFleur to learn about Norwegian weaving and and her particular passion for the art of Frida Hansen.

Monthly Guild Meeting – Bidisha Malik on Mira Behn and Khadi

Bidisha Mallik

Bidisha  will introduce to you Madeleine Slade (1892-1982), better known in India as Mira Behn, the most famous European associate of Mohandas K. Gandhi, who was also a progressive environmental thinker, a fact the world knows less about. She formulated perhaps the first environmentalist agenda in India, highlighting the social and ecological constraints to development and unlimited economic growth.

Mira Behn’s lessons in Gandhian thinking began not in the soil of India but in England, where she learned carding, spinning, and weaving at the Kensington Weavers of London. In India, Mira Behn went on to become a key figure in Gandhi’s Constructive Program for village economic self-reliance: she helped develop and expand Gandhi’s idea of khadi (Indian homespun cloth) through her choice and advocacy of clothes and aesthetics that transcended colonial, gender, class, and elitist bias and her tireless work to improve the methods of spinning, carding, and weaving for village self-determination during India’s independence movement.