Could a lost craft be the next big thing?
Originally published in the Santa Cruz Sentinel November 14, 2009
Without a doubt, the most popular crafts in the U.S. are knitting, quilting and scrapbooking. The number of books publish
ed and space devoted in craft stores to these pursuits far exceeds the other contenders. So, with all the creative possibilities in the world, what makes these three so appealing?
Secondly, the materials and tools are portable and don’t demand a dedicated workspace. They aren’t bulky like woodshop machinery or messy like paints. They can be done in your home—at the kitchen table or in a comfortable chair.
Age-old crafts like knitting, quilting and scrapbooking have enjoyed swells in popu
larity at certain periods in history for a variety of reasons. For example, knitting—a necessary skill prior to the industrial
revolution—declined with the invention of machine knitting, increased during the “Knitting for Victory” campaign during WWII, had a huge boost as greater colors and styles of yarn were introduced after the war years (think twinsets), and then declined again in the 1980s as knitting was no longer
taught in schools and considered old-fashioned.
So, as we close out the first decade of the 21st century, it’s time to speculate what will be the next big craft? Several books have been published recently about lost crafts, featuring skills like candle- and soap-making, that were necessary for survival for most of history, but have become nothing more than boutique hobbies for the last century or more.
· pargeting (a decorative plasterwork on buildings, sometimes featuring extravagant sculptural reliefs)
· cob walling (wall building with a mixture of subsoil, water and straw)
· rushlights (a cheap candle made from rush pith dipped in melted animal fat)
· Sussex trugs (a shallow, oblong basket made from willow strips)
· tussie-mussies (a small posy of flowers and herbs)
Finding instructions and materials
Of course who’s to say when tatting, thatching, and wheelwrighting might come back into vogue? But I looked for crafts that might have some potential of resurgence—or, at the very least, ones that I could find instructions for on the internet. Since not only the crafts, but the materials needed to produce them are also “lost,” it would take quite a revolution to create a broom-making, wheat-weaving or pomander-making craze. But luckily a small number of vendors in the virtual world still carry broomcorn, long-stemmed wheat and orris root.
Supplies: blackbeards-wheat.cc; www.franksupply.com
Instructions: www.wheatweaving.com
Supplies: www.recaddy.com; www.franksupply.com
Instructions: www.motherearthnews.com
Supplies: www.mountainroseherbs.com
Instructions:
Whole cloves
Wide rubber bands
Ribbon
1 T. Orris root powder
1 T. each Cinnamon, nutmeg and ground cloves
Paper bag
Toothpick
"Of course who’s to say when tatting, thatching, and wheelwrighting might come back into vogue?"
ReplyDeleteCough, cough, splutter, splutter!!!! Tatting has never gone out of vogue and is VERY much alive and thriving on the internet. That's REAL tatting using a shuttle, of course. It's had the odd 'glitch' when it's not been quite so popular during the past 53 years while I've been tatting but it's NEVER gone away and is very much in vogue. Please visit my blog and my web site for confirmation.