I visited
the Lace
museum yesterday for the exhibit Schitterend
geplooied. It was very interesting - definitely worth a visit. Although
there was much to see, especially in regards to the amazing handwork of the
Chinese Miao and Dong people, I found myself most fascinated by the basic
things right here in Holland
long before machinery. I say this, because the museum has a rondleiding to explain all the equipment
that produces lace products. But I was most curious watching the Dutch video
explaining how flax was grown, harvested and turned into linen. What an amazing
long, labour intensive process, and it happened here. I don't need to eroticise
another culture. I can be quite impressed with this one!
As someone
who has grown up in the U.S. ,
and lived my whole life in the Northern hemisphere, I have no clue how things
are made from scratch. I grew up eating spinach from a box out of the freezer. I
never had a garden. I had no idea how things grew...but slowly as I grow older
I am learning to appreciate slowing down, and learning how things were made...
before technology. But of course, I have the privilege of romanticizing this
with Western eyes. Looking back at a simpler life but knowing it wasn't
simpler, only harder. And for some people, in some countries, it remains hard...but
then again, if you are living the culture, perhaps it doesn't feel hard, it
just is. Yet, I know for some it is hard and I have the luxury of just paying
for the things I want.
Anyway, a
year ago, I bought some antique linen. Handmade linen. It fascinated me, so I
was so happy to watch this video about the process of making the linen that I
now own. As I grow older, I learn to
slow down, enjoy the simpler things in life, and I learn to make, dye and
create my own things starting from their source. I'll be out picking up
windfall for dying fabrics soon. Anyone want to join me?
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