made this chestplate by Imogen Rose Denton and i love it thank u

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made this chestplate by Imogen Rose Denton and i love it thank u

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today i started reading this book i purchased on a visit to a museum (o˘◡˘o)
Against a rising tide of automation and increasing digital complexity, we are becoming further divorced from the very thing that defines us: we are makers, crafters of things. Where our lives once comprised an almost unbroken chain of movements and actions as we interacted physically with the material requirements of our existence, today we stare at screens and we press buttons. When we made things, we accumulated a certain kind of knowledge, we had an awareness and an understanding of how materials worked and how the human form has evolved to create from them. With the severance from this ability we’re in danger of losing touch with a knowledge base that allows us to convert raw materials into useful objects, a hand-eye-head-heart-body co-ordination that furnishes us with a meaningful understanding of the materiality of our world. Some people call this knowledge know-how to distinguish it from formal knowledge, the knowledge of principals. But you could call it craeft. It is a wisdom that furnishes the practitioner with a certain power.
Alexander Langlands
Craeft, An Inquiry into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts
A genuinely interesting exploration of a subject increasingly preoccupying lots of otherwise thoroughly modern readers, Craeft: An Inquiry into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts. New from Norton.
Black and white copy negative depicting two women knitting as they walk carrying full creels of peat back from Daal on Foula, parish of Walls, Shetland in 1902 (national museums scotland - found via this article which is amazing if you're interested in spinning)

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Sidensvans by Frida Oskap, knit in plotulopi! the pattern was inspired by traditional swedish dress vests. i got the lovely buttons from my mom and knit the entire thing while binging The Expanse with my boyfriend over the weekend. it was an interesting mix of slow craeft and high-tech brilliantly made sci-fi. would recommend (and would recommend this pattern, it was my first time doing colour work and it was a good introduction to it!)
Little (just finished - purpurea + Flanders red) + big (finished last week - Americana+ purpurea)
set out to make a basket sculpture today - I don't love the end result, it got way bigger than I expected and I didn't anticipate that with my material so it's a bit wobbly - might get better as the willow dries.
BUT if nothing else I think my base was gor-ge-ous colour-wise!