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Maison & Objet September 2012 – Save Our Skills (Burkina Faso) – Eleanor Pritchard – Idoia Cuesta and others

Maison et Objet is a major trade fair held in Paris twice a year, in September and January.  It´s the place to connect with broad trends and where shops, galleries, designers, and manufacturers go to see, sell, buy textiles – furniture – interiors – worldwide.  There was a strong international presence in the fair and in amongst the hundreds of stands, in the Ateliers de France, section, I discovered stands by a good number of Galician Spanish craft workshops based not far from where I have my studio in north Spain.  Orders are taken at the fair by shops and work is then either sent on from stock, or made-to-order.   But there is more to Maison & Objet than just commerce as the images of the Burkina Faso weaving culture project by Save Our Skills shows.


Fabrics with a very special story from Burkina Faso.  Save Our Skills is an ambitious social project which aims to support traditional weavers and promote sustainable, organic agriculture with the re-introduction of organic cotton as an alternative to Monsanto cotton.

It was a rare priveledge to be introduced to Masa Dembele, master weaver, who was demonstrating with the portable 2 shaft looms that are traditional in his area.  I was amazed to see that the weave structure he was working with was very similar in some ways to the traditional Spanish overshot, (the pattern yarn “floats” over the surface of the fabric and the fabric is given stability with a ground weave in tabby).  But the designs are very different.  Those from Burkina Faso are more complex and not necessarily symmetrical because the weave method is more manually-controlled.

The loss of traditional regional weaving skills is, ironically, as acute in north Spain as it is in Burkina Faso, and the search for new ways forward is as difficult in Europe as it is in Africa.  There is also the added difficulty that export is not as obvious a solution:  wages and the cost of living in Spain are of course European, so it is even more difficult to make manual skills pay through the sale of work.   In Burkina Faso, traditional organic cotton cultivation has almost disappeared – and in Galicia, north Spain, it is the same with linen.   Overshot weaving in Galicia, north Spain, known as repaso nuevo, used traditionally for woven coverlets, has also become obsolete and there are virtually no traditional weavers left – and few younger weavers who have learned from them.

Thank you to Karin, Désiré and Denzel of Save Our Skills and the British European Design Group.  And of course anakiéh to Masa and Désiré.

 

Eleanor Pritchard´s elegantly-simple blankets are 100% wool and woven in Wales and are particular favourites of mine.   Eleanor is an accomplished weaver and designer.  She designs on a dobby loom in her studio and the textiles are woven by machine looms.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Waffle weave scarf design in silk and wool with natural dyes by Anna Champeney Estudio Textil (Spain)

designing scarf colours

Inspiring colours from the pictures of a Welsh Dahlia anemone produce a striking design

 

Waffle weave scarves on just 4 shafts give you a wonderful opportunity to explore colour and structure on the loom.  Anna Champeney Textile Studio in Spain produces limited editions of natural dyed waffle scarves in silk and wool which are available directly from the studio and the Charo Rey store (by St Martin Pinario) in Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain.

waffle weave anemone scarf

Luminescent colours on this waffle weave scarf dyed with natural dyes (Design and weave by Anna Champeney Estudio Textil)

waffle weave glow

Colour graduations on waffle weave produce a glow on the final piece

waffle weave silk scarf

Complex colour interactions result in an overall design which appears very different to the original warp colours

choosing colours

Dyeing one´s own colour palette gives you an unparallelled control and choice of colour and tone

two-sided waffle weave

1 warp 3 versions

rosaliás scarf

Gradual colour changes in warp and weft produce designs of subtlety and simple beauty

weaving with 2 shuttles enables the weaver to explore more complex interactions between colour and structure

weaving with 2 shuttles, each with a different colour, enables the weaver to explore more complex interactions between colour and structure

 

blue and green waffle weave

Indigo, copper, locally-grown dyers´ chamomile and weld produce a gently harmonious colour palette on this waffle weave scarf

warp

Limited edition scarves are woven in series of just 3 pieces. Here you see the combination of colours used for a warp but a single scarf may have as many as 20 different hues and tones

All pieces shown here are already sold or reserved.  Only 6 – 8 more one-off pieces will be made using this silk-wool blend.  To inquire further or reserve one of these pieces please contact Anna Champeney Estudio Textil direct.

Gathering weld (Reseda luteola) for natural dyeing course in northwest Spain

harvested weld in Galicia SpainBundle of locally-harvested weld (Reseda luteola) being carried to Anna Champeney Estudio Textil in Galicia, northwest Spain, for dyeing wool and linen.   

Natural Dye Course – 28 / 29 July 2012

If you´re interestesd in sources of natural colour for textile design and yarn craft this course is for you!  You´ll have the chance to test out this weld to dye soft lambswool yarn with gorgeous shades of yellow and green.  On the course you will also be using the high quality European cochineal from Lanzarote, obtained directly from local farmers!

Cost:  125€

Where:  Anna Champeney Estudio Textil, Cristosende, 32765 A Teixeira, Ourense (nearest airport Santiago de Compostela / A Coruña) Spain.   About 5 hours drive from Madrid.  About 45 minutes drive from Ourense train station and 35 minutes from Monforte de Lemos train station.

Reserve me a place!

 

weld and dyer

The flowering spikes are used for more yellow dyes, the stems give greener hues

green weld

Linen dyed green with weld (scarf design by Anna Champeney Estudio Textil)