Monday 26 September 2016

My most recent designs

I have made some new designs.



OPERA SHAWL
MARSCHALLIN






Two new Fair Isle berets



Thursday 22 September 2016

Craftsmanship today:A Symposium on Modern Making 24 September 2016






This is a conference organised by The Guild of St George , under the general title of RUSKIN AND CRAFTSMANSHIP.



Troubled by the sense of an economy running ‘on thin air’, and by a trade system that routinely divides the design of a product from its production, a new generation of thinkers and makers are turning their attention to the human and material value of craftsmanship. Recent books on this subject include Paul Greenhalgh’s The Persistence of Craft (2002), Glenn Adamson’s Thinking Through Craft (2007), Richard Sennett’s The Craftsman (2009), Matthew Crawford’s The Case for Working With Your Hands, and Tanya Harrod’s The Real Thing: Essays on Making in the Modern World (2015). This symposium is designed to explore and extend such debates.
We will discuss the big questions (What is ‘craftsmanship’, and what do craftspeople stand for? Is craftsmanship a matter of the hand and the eye, or can it work in partnership with machines and computers? Is craftsmanship a matter of nostalgia, or can it survive in the modern world?). But we will reflect also on these matters in their practical dimension, as we hear modern craftspeople discuss the opportunities and challenges posed by different materials, and by different qualities of finish. In this way, the event combines the insights of theorists and thinkers with reports on the continuing experience of making.
The event is inspired by the ideas and ideals of John Ruskin, a Victorian art critic and social prophet, whose views on the ethical and human value of craftsmanship inspired William Morris and the Arts and Crafts Movement. Ruskin was interested not only in the past of the crafts, but in their present practice: his stirring personal motto, ‘To-day’, is echoed in the title of this event. Organised by the Guild of St George, a charity for arts, crafts and the rural economy originally founded by Ruskin in 1871.

The programme includes an introductory address,
WHAT IS CRAFTSMANSHIP? 
by Marcus Waithe, Magdalene College, Cambridge
and a keynote address by Tanya Harrod, author of
THE REAL THING: ESSAYS ON MAKING IN THE MODERN WORLD