Lost Arts (and Crafts)
#31
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Maine-ly Florida
Posts: 3,917
Chalk bothers my allergies so I am so happy that we don't use it to teach with anymore. We have an infocus machine now in our classrooms that projects from the computer onto our white dry erase boards. It is so great - such an improvement. I can scan a work paper into my computer, access it and project it really large onto the board. Everyone can see it. Then the kids can solve math problems etc. with markers. This is a huge improvement. I can also show clips on the board. We watched a video of a crayfish molting last year during one of our science units. It was taken in Australia!
I still hand embroider and love it. Would love to learn how to tat, too.
lots2do
I still hand embroider and love it. Would love to learn how to tat, too.
lots2do
#32
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: British Columbia
Posts: 2,307
I've been reading "Little House in the Big Woods" to my DGD which is full of description about how Ma and Pa made this or that. Although I know that our lives are easier and we live longer with these modern conveniences, I can't help but wonder what we are losing.
I recently watched a Native woman fillet a whole tub of salmon in the time it takes me to do one - poorly.
I recently watched a Native woman fillet a whole tub of salmon in the time it takes me to do one - poorly.
#33
Originally Posted by b.zang
I've been reading "Little House in the Big Woods" to my DGD which is full of description about how Ma and Pa made this or that. Although I know that our lives are easier and we live longer with these modern conveniences, I can't help but wonder what we are losing.
I recently watched a Native woman fillet a whole tub of salmon in the time it takes me to do one - poorly.
I recently watched a Native woman fillet a whole tub of salmon in the time it takes me to do one - poorly.
#34
Originally Posted by raptureready
When I was needing a darning egg I used one of the larger plastic Easter eggs--the kind you put candy inside. It worked pretty good.
#36
I do hand embroidery and find it quite enjoyable.
This isn't really and art or craft (I think?), but I recently went to the Vandalia Festival here in Charleston, WV. It's a really fun festival with lots of bluegrass music, TONS of pretty quilts, food, etc. Well, I joined in a square dancing thing (which I've never done before in my life - it was SO fun!) and later as I was watching the people dance, I thought it was sad that they were mostly only older people. There were very few people my age (20s). And I just sat there hoping and praying that the traditions would never die out.
This isn't really and art or craft (I think?), but I recently went to the Vandalia Festival here in Charleston, WV. It's a really fun festival with lots of bluegrass music, TONS of pretty quilts, food, etc. Well, I joined in a square dancing thing (which I've never done before in my life - it was SO fun!) and later as I was watching the people dance, I thought it was sad that they were mostly only older people. There were very few people my age (20s). And I just sat there hoping and praying that the traditions would never die out.
#37
Originally Posted by lots2do
...
I still hand embroider and love it. Would love to learn how to tat, too.
lots2do
I still hand embroider and love it. Would love to learn how to tat, too.
lots2do
#38
Originally Posted by Aussie Quilter
I still darn (wool) socks. ..
.
.
When I was first married, I kept seeing a plastic bag with DH's socks sitting in my sewing room. It seemed to be growing. Finally asked about it. Seems his mother and aunt (whom he lived with during college) darned them for him. I showed him how I did it. Took the bag and dropped it into the wastebasket while saying, "Oh Darn!" In my defense, lest you think me wasteful or a poor wife, these were just ordinary, everyday socks. I have occasionally darned good wool socks if I could do it smoothly without creating a blister-making spot.
:lol:
#39
Originally Posted by PuffinGin
Originally Posted by Aussie Quilter
I still darn (wool) socks. ..
.
.
When I was first married, I kept seeing a plastic bag with DH's socks sitting in my sewing room. It seemed to be growing. Finally asked about it. Seems his mother and aunt (whom he lived with during college) darned them for him. I showed him how I did it. Took the bag and dropped it into the wastebasket while saying, "Oh Darn!" In my defense, lest you think me wasteful or a poor wife, these were just ordinary, everyday socks. I have occasionally darned good wool socks if I could do it smoothly without creating a blister-making spot.
:lol:[/quote]
I like your sock-darning method! :lol: :lol: :lol:
My knitting friend who got me back into knitting gave me some beautiful self-striping sock wool over a year ago. If I ever manage to knit that into a pair of socks, those will be the only ones that get darned.
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