Photo credits not credited or well-credited
The amazing shetland sheep photo on page 26 was taken by Kate Gervais.
The photo on page 35 are from Jeni Reid.
The photo on page 36, of the sheep, was taken by Magnus Holbourn.
Deb and Diane tie the knot: Palme and Menz
Sabraset and WashFast acid dyes – Pro Chemical and Dye (prochemicalanddye.com)
Fan beaters, scissors, hook knives, and yarn – Noreen Roberts (ghiordes.co.uk)
Netting shuttles – Nadine Sanders (singingweaver.com)
Build your own tapestry loom using copper or black pipe –(americantapestryalliance.org/education/educational-articles/copper-pipe-looms/)
6″ Appliqué scissors and thread nippers available online or at fabric stores
Davidson’s 4-ply Navaho Warp – Davidson’s Old Mill Yarn (oldmillyarn.webs.com)
Communities through time: Christina Pappas
Would you like to learn more? Check out these references:
Christina T. Halperin (2008). CLASSIC MAYA TEXTILE PRODUCTION: INSIGHTS FROM MOTUL DE SAN JOSÉ, PETEN, GUATEMALA. Ancient Mesoamerica, 19, pp 111-125
http://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_S0956536108000230
Sharisse McCafferty and Geoffrey McCafferty (1994). ENGENDERING TOMB 7 AT MONTE ALBÁN. Current Anthropology, 35(2), pp 143-152
http://www.jstor.org/stable/2744178
Julia Hendon (2006). TEXTILE PRODUCTION AS CRAFT IN MESOAMERICA: TIME, LABOR AND KNOWLEDGE. Journal of Social Archaeology, 6(3), pp 354-378
http://jsa.sagepub.com/content/6/3/354
Arlen Chase, Diane Chase, Elayne Zorn, and Wendy Teeter (2008). TEXTILES AND THE MAYA ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORD: GENDER, POWER, AND STATUS IN CLASSIC PERIOD CARACOL, BELIZE. Ancient Mesoamerica, 19, pp 127-142
Errata: Shetland Sheep and Wool: Deb Robson
Page 36: the titles for the Shetland College and Textile museum are switched.
Deb and Diane tie the knot: Palme and Menz
Sabraset and WashFast acid dyes – Pro Chemical and Dye (prochemicalanddye.com)
Fan beaters, scissors, hook knives, and yarn – Noreen Roberts (ghiordes.co.uk)
Netting shuttles – Nadine Sanders (singingweaver.com)
Build your own tapestry loom using copper or black pipe –(americantapestryalliance.org/education/educational-articles/copper-pipe-looms/)
6″ Appliqué scissors and thread nippers available online or at fabric stores
Davidson’s 4-ply Navaho Warp – Davidson’s Old Mill Yarn (oldmillyarn.webs.com)
Communities through time: Christina Pappas
Would you like to learn more? Check out these references:
Christina T. Halperin (2008). CLASSIC MAYA TEXTILE PRODUCTION: INSIGHTS FROM MOTUL DE SAN JOSÉ, PETEN, GUATEMALA. Ancient Mesoamerica, 19, pp 111-125
http://journals.cambridge.org/abstract_S0956536108000230
Sharisse McCafferty and Geoffrey McCafferty (1994). ENGENDERING TOMB 7 AT MONTE ALBÁN. Current Anthropology, 35(2), pp 143-152
http://www.jstor.org/stable/2744178
Julia Hendon (2006). TEXTILE PRODUCTION AS CRAFT IN MESOAMERICA: TIME, LABOR AND KNOWLEDGE. Journal of Social Archaeology, 6(3), pp 354-378
http://jsa.sagepub.com/content/6/3/354
Arlen Chase, Diane Chase, Elayne Zorn, and Wendy Teeter (2008). TEXTILES AND THE MAYA ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECORD: GENDER, POWER, AND STATUS IN CLASSIC PERIOD CARACOL, BELIZE. Ancient Mesoamerica, 19, pp 127-142
Shetland Sheep and Wool: a crossover of communities - Deb Robson
Fine Fleece Shetland Sheep Association, http://www.finefleeceshetlandsheep.org/
Foula Wool, http://www.foulawool.co.uk/
Midwest Shetland Sheepbreeders Association, http://www.mssba.org/
North American Shetland Sheepbreeders Association, http://www.shetland-sheep.org/
Jamieson & Smith, http://shetlandwoolbrokers.co.uk
Shetland College, part of the University of the Highlands and Islands, http://www.shetland.uhi.ac.uk/
Shetland Flock Book Society: no website that I’ve ever been able to find
Shetland Museum & Archives: http://www.shetlandmuseumandarchives.org.uk/
Shetland Organics: http://www.shetlandorganics.com/
Shetland Sheep Society, http://www.shetland-sheep.org.uk
Shetland Textile Museum, Böd of Gremista, http://shetlandtextilemuseum.wordpress.com/
Shetland Wool Week: http://www.shetlandwoolweek.com/
Unst Heritage Center, http://www.unstheritage.com/web/unst-heritage-centre/
A few readings about Shetland in the context of community:
Abrams, Lynn. Myth and Materiality in a Woman’s World: Shetland 1800-2000. Manchester University Press, 2005.
Fryer, Linda G. Knitting by the Fireside and on the Hillside: A History of the Shetland Hand Knitting Industry c. 1600-1950. Shetland Times, 1995.
Laurenson, Sarah. Shetland Textiles 800 Bc to the Present. Lerwick, Shetland: Shetland Heritage Publications, 2013.
Spindle 7 – Robyn Love
Spinning to Spec -- Beth Smith
On page 12-13, we transposed our terms. Beth’s BFL was spun with a short forward draw and gently snapped (not whacked) and her Columbia was spun longdraw with some whacking (not gentle snapping). Sorry about the confusion.