Ribbons & Trims Workshop: Ayse Simsek

summer school imageAyse Simsek will be running a ribbons and trims weaving workshop from 13th July – 17th July 2015. The workshop will be using 8 shaft table-top looms and participants will be designing and making ribbons and decorative trims which can be used for a variety of end uses including; fashion, accessories, interiors and other craft projects.

This workshop provides the perfect platform to both begin to learn the process of loom set-up and to get to grips with some weaving techniques, as you will be working on a small scale. Experienced weavers also very welcome. All the skills you learn are fully adaptable to create larger fabrics on a loom.

The workshop will start by designing a ribbon warp based on colours and yarns that inspire you. Participants will  be guided through the process of making a warp, putting it onto a loom and threading up and how to weave. Using a variety of materials and techniques you are encouraged to experiment finding designs that you like, which  participants will  produce in longer lengths. At the end of the week the finished pieces will be taken off  the loom, and  potential  finishing techniques discussed and the end use of the ribbons and trims

Ayse Simsek gained her MA from The Royal College of Art, is a professional weaver and works term time as Weave Technician at Central Saint Martins.

Times: 10 – 16.00 each day.
Venue: Central Saint Martins, University of The Arts London. Kings Cross site

To book: www.arts.ac.uk/csm/courses/short-courses/fashion-and-textiles/textile-design/introduction-to-weaving-ribbons-and-trims/

Booking is open until the course start date

 

Exhibitions & Profile: Dovecot Tapestry Studio

Low res_GarryFabianMiller_DovecotTapestryStudio_HearthRug_TheGoldenLight

Dovecot Tapestry Studio, based in Edinburgh, is a world-renowned producer of hand-woven tapestry and gun-tufted rugs. Continuing a century-long heritage of making and collaboration with leading international contemporary artists, the Studio weavers are dedicated to producing extraordinary works of art by commission from private and public collectors from around the globe.

Dovecot Foundation exists to champion Dovecot Tapestry Studio and its place in the world of contemporary art, design and making. The Foundation puts Dovecot Tapestry Studio at the heart of this mission in the support of the Dovecot Apprenticeship Programme, collaborations with leading artists from around the world and the development of cultural and educational partnerships. Ultimately, the Foundation seeks to bring the innovative work of contemporary artists and makers to a wider audience (see further).

Garry Fabian Miller Dwelling at Dovecot Gallery
15 May to 4 July 2015

Dwelling at Dovecot Gallery from 15 May to 4 July 2015 highlights the importance of home and its landscape to the work of Garry Fabian Miller. Alongside recent works by Fabian Miller, the exhibition will feature two new hearth rugs produced by Dovecot Tapestry Studio in collaboration with the artist, as well as explorations of the artist’s influences including important paintings by Winifred Nicholson.

Continue reading →

Exhibitions & PhD: Barbara Jansen

3 - temporal patterns - colour flowBarbara Jansen will be displaying two projects (physical prototypes): “rhythm exercise” and “Sinus 64 + blue” at Techtextil Fair in Frankfurt on the stand from Smart Textiles/University of Boras, stand 3.1 C76, 4th-7th May 2015.

She will be on site on 4th-6th May. She will also give a lecture on  her PhD research at Elfack Fair in the Light Forum at the Swedish Exhibition and Congress Center in Gothenburg 7th -may 2015.

Temporal patterns – Solo Exhibition.
Textile Museum Boras, Sweden. 17th February – 29th March

7 - temporal patterns - Sinus 64 + blueIn this exhibition, textile designer Barbara Jansen presented her PhD thesis, in which she investigated the visual effects of movement using light as a continuous time-based medium. The textiles displayed in this exhibition showed a varying range of examples which explore aesthetic possibilities of how light can be integrated as an active part into textile structures. Thereby ranging from weaving, to knitting and braiding techniques, both hand crafted, as well as industrial produced.

Continue reading →

Call for Applications: Cockpit Arts / The Clothworkers’ Foundation Award 2015

SMALL.Amor La momposina.4About The Award:

Applications are invited for the Cockpit Arts / The Clothworkers’ Foundation Award 2015. The Award is only open to weavers who have graduated within the last 5 years.

The Award aims to assist emerging weavers to set up in business by providing studio space and business support provided by Cockpit Arts as well as shared use of looms.

There are Two Awards available and the selection panel (including the acclaimed ikat weaver and designer, Mary Restieaux) will be looking for individuals who demonstrate entrepreneurial spirit as well as creative excellence and craft skills.

The Award contributes to the cost of a place at Cockpit for one year from July 2015 and will include a space in a shared studio equipped with 3 looms, Leclerc and Louet, and the following benefits:

  • Studio space and use of looms within the creative community of Cockpit Arts at Deptford, London, SE8 with access to office facilities and resource centre.
  • Business and professional development services including on-site coaching, a personalised development plan, access to finance, workshops and events.
  • A range of selling and promotional opportunities including Cockpit Arts Open Studios selling events.
  • Award worth £2,000 with the remaining £2,000 fee being provided by the Award winner, payable on a monthly basis.

How to apply:

  •  Please request a “Clothworkers Award” application pack from dana@cockpitarts.com
  •  Deadline for receipt of applications is Monday 18 May, 12pm
  •  Interviews with shortlisted applicants will be held on Tuesday 26 May

Text & image: Copyright Cockpit arts

Job: Tibor

img002Graduate Full Time Position: Production Manager/Personal Assistant
The opportunity:

To work on the relaunch of Interior and Lifestyle brand ‘Tibor’ founded by Tibor Reich in 1946.
For more information see www.tiborreichtrust.org/
Tibor is based in Notting Hill London.

The Role:
Liasing with textile maufacturers ( weavers, spinners, dyers) Liasing with interior designers and furniture manufacturers Helping to organise the |Tibor Reich retrospective exhibition at The Fashion and Textile Museum-London and Whitworth Manchester in 2016 Helping to compile a 300 page book on Tibor Reich’s life in design
General Admin and day to day running of the company
Knowledge of and working on social media, look books. Website, photography
Organising the Tibor Reich archive
Continue reading →

Première Vision report: Fiona O’Keefe

Fiona O’Keefe is a second year weave student at Central Saint Martins, University of The Arts London. This is the account of her first visit to Premiere Vision.

LanyardSporting the all-important lanyard and armed with a free guide, Première Vision was at first, and at the very least, overwhelming. Attending the trade fair as part of a class trip, we had been given various tips and tricks to aid our maiden voyage, but negotiating the maze of elevated, opaque stands was something that can only be experienced first hand.

Thanks to an immediate coffee-break and an avid perusal of the surprisingly helpful maps, the day at Première Vision looked somewhat more surmountable. The exhibition halls were vast, but the forums that were scattered throughout each were accessible and offered students a hands-on opportunity to get a feel for what was at the fair.

The biggest forum, situated in Hall 6 Fabrics, boasted a miscellany of mainly-woven samples that were assorted into different trends. Placed side by side, ’Bathrobe’ and ‘Spongey Languor’ attracted much attention as hands reached in from all angles to clutch at the cushiony samples.

Italian mill Mantero Seta had a take on this trend which stood out from their cotton, lilac and chartreuse counterparts. The silk alternative they offered in a blush pink with playful flashes of primary colour created a squashy but sophisticated newness. The feeling here was simultaneously soft and lively.

Teeming It was the vivacity in colour, mood and texture that recurred within another trend titled ‘Teeming’, which visibly proved popular among those who came across it. Clusters of colour dotted in and around graphic shapes cropped up on samples from both Ratti and Malhia Kent who used jacquard weaving to produce busy, illustrative patterns.

This energy extended as far as their stands and at Malhia Kent getting past their front desk was akin to gaining entry at an exclusive night club or fashion show. Large, scribbly and dazzling samples in shades of neon green and glittering gold had been tossed artfully over the walls of the stand, and the constant groups of hopefuls milling around it generated a definite buzz.

Continue reading →

Textile Institute Talk: Futuristic Textiles

image001

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bill Macbeth will outline some of the ground breaking technology developments happening in Yorkshire including the world firsts in true 3D weaving system  to create components for the aerospace and automotive sectors and the Laser Plasma technology producing dry waterproof and fire retardant treatments using no fluorocarbons.   Bill will also introduce the forensic anti counterfeit treatment utilising restructured botanical DNA.

Symposium: Threads and Codes

Scan10006Threads and Codes Symposium at Goldsmiths, London, March 6th 2015
Research symposium: Threads and Codes
www.kairotic.org/threads-codes/

Time: 10am-6pm
Venue: 137 Richard Hoggart Building, Goldsmiths, New Cross, London SE14 6NW

Register online (by 1st March): www.is.gd/threadscodes
Price: £7 (£5 concessions), including lunch.

The Weaving Codes, Coding Weaves project explores the practices of weaving and computer programming together, considering both looms and computers as algorithmic environments for creative work with pattern.

The connection between computing and the Jacquard loom is well known, but the project researchers want to go deeper in history and philosophy, to investigate traditional work with threads for its digital nature, including the genesis of discrete mathematics in ancient looms.

This will provide an unravelling of contemporary technology, finding an alternative account of computer programming with its roots in arts and craft. On this basis this symposium will investigate contemporary theoretical points where textile and code-based crafts connect.

All interested researchers and practitioners are warmly invited to join the project for Threads and Codes, an all-day symposium which will consist of diverse talks and panels exploring the above topics, co-organised by Dr Ellen Harlizius-Klück (International co-investigator), Dr Alex McLean (principal investigator) and Prof Janis Jefferies (project partner). The results of the symposium will feed into a special issue of Textile: The Journal of Cloth and Culture.
Continue reading →

Bonnie Kirkwood: Première Vision

BONNIE KIRKWOOD 2 - CopyBonnie Kirkwood is exhibiting at Première Vision Designs 2015  (previously Indigo) to launch her new spring summer 2016 collection of hand woven designs for the global fashion market. She had previously shown there as a Texprint winner.

This London based textile company , specialises in bespoke woven textile design and fabric consultancy for the fashion and interior industries.

Bonnie’s woven collections illustrate a high awareness of the market, with stimulating use of colour. Her signature styles range from intricate patterns in silks, innovative textures in wool, to finest weaves in linen and cotton. Combined with specific yarn and quality selection,these fabrics have global appeal.

Working internationally for the high end contemporary fashion and interior industries, through appointment and international trade fairs Bonnie offers a diverse service, encompassing design, development and production of woven fabric from commercial through to luxury level.
Continue reading →

Company Profile: John Spencer Textiles

Spencer familyJohn Spencer Textiles are a 6th generation family weaving company run by the great-great-great grandson of the founder. The picture shows John Spencer, his son John and his grandson Tertius.

The mill is the last remaining traditional cotton mill in Burnley, Lancashire, once the world centre of cotton weaving.

130212_n0200Specialising in the weaving of spun yarns, the company makes a huge range of fabric widths and weights for all sorts of end uses including home furnishings, ladies and menswear, protective clothing, industrial fabrics and even parachutes.

Fibres used include cotton, wool, silk, linen, viscose and polyester to name but a few. Coloured yarns can be incorporated into the designs with unlimited warp colours and up to 6 weft colours.

Continue reading →