Claire Wellesley Smith on thinking through making

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  • čas přidán 28. 06. 2024
  • Claire Wellesley-Smith sees the privilege in being able to carve out time each day to stitch as a way of sifting through her life.
    She has created a map of her thinking through making which unrolls like a scroll and reveals the stories of her textile journey in Shipley, near Bradford in west Yorkshire, the former heart of the wool textile industry in the United Kingdom.
    This stitch journal began in 2013 and records Claire’s daily practice of pausing and reflecting, perhaps only for 10 minutes or much longer when there is a lot of thought-processing to be done.
    Her two books, Slow Stitch and Resilient Stitch published by Batsford, are based around the stitching process which Claire absorbed almost by osmosis from her mother and grandmother who sewed for practical purposes.
    Claire gains wellbeing benefit from the focused activity of stitching, when the eye is drawn to a small area of cloth and a pattern is created through a generative process.
    “It’s an immense privilege for me to even carve 10 minutes out of my day to stitch in a kind of meaningless fashion. I'm not making something, I'm not cutting out 50 coats a day and having to stitch them together. This is absolute privilege.”
    On the other hand, a lot of Claire’s work is in community settings because she is passionate about providing opportunities for people to be engaged and share skills together.
    She believes sewing skills are massively useful because they give you agency over your own stuff, which can be a powerful thing.
    Claire is in the final stages of a PhD with The Open University with support from the Arts and Humanities Research Council. It includes experiences of post-industrial textile communities, including Bradford, and projects encouraging participants to engage in slow craft-based work as a reflection of resilience of participants and place.
    It was so enjoyable to be with Claire stitching in her studio as part of my Churchill Fellowship study of how being hands-on with our clothes can reduce waste and enhance wellbeing.
    #slowstitch #slowclothing #ChurchillFellowship #makingforwellbeing #stitching #diy

Komentáře • 14

  • @elizabethsawyer5906
    @elizabethsawyer5906 Před rokem +3

    So lovely to meet the author of the Slow stitch book that inspired me to start slow stitching. Thank you 💕

  • @kittybaxter2228
    @kittybaxter2228 Před 4 měsíci

    Really enjoyed listening to this. It was wide ranging and provided a lot of food for thought. Encourages me to keep using the clothes I have. Have never thought about seed to fabric. I look forward to ordering the books from the library. Thanks!

  • @CraftSchoolOz
    @CraftSchoolOz Před 5 měsíci +1

    Oh wow Jane! this is a great conversation with Claire Wellesley Smith. Her books are my very favourite. Thanks for sharing.

  • @ESOTERISMOYREALIDADES53
    @ESOTERISMOYREALIDADES53 Před rokem +1

    the best therapy-we go to and fro in time-each peace of cloth I use is a piece of my childrens clothes..

  • @freeee35
    @freeee35 Před 6 měsíci

    A delightful interview…what a lovely idea for working out things… a sort of meditation technique as well as a journal of sorts to remember. Most thought provoking… Thank you

  • @belindasands5928
    @belindasands5928 Před rokem +1

    Thank you!! Clare’s cardigan is beautiful - loved watching this 😊

  • @joaquinribeiro2941
    @joaquinribeiro2941 Před 7 měsíci

    Quedé con la curiosidad de ver su trabajo completo .
    Ella se ve muy auténtica y serena . Muy agradable .

  • @cathybrelza5055
    @cathybrelza5055 Před 4 měsíci

    This conversation was brilliant

  • @lindalucas6318
    @lindalucas6318 Před 11 měsíci +1

    I believe if from a young age you have a connection to your family and yourself it gives you a grounding. Over consumption is the direct affect of not having been grounded and the void as a consequence needs filling with stuff, sad 😢

  • @CherylHarpercompulsivespinner

    Too bad the volume wasn't better. Can hardly hear what is being said.

  • @alejandrohurtado4098
    @alejandrohurtado4098 Před rokem +1

    Traducir en español

    • @joaquinribeiro2941
      @joaquinribeiro2941 Před 7 měsíci

      Busca cómo hacerlo . Estoy en estos momentos leyendo los comentarios en español .

  • @christinepreston8267
    @christinepreston8267 Před rokem +3

    Sound not very good!