Dalesman February 2012

My trips this month span the breadth of North Yorkshire, with visits to Leyburn, Thirsk, and Sutton Bank.

Castle Bolton is a visitor attraction near Leyburn

Castle Bolton, once a fearsome Mediaeval stronghold, now a peaceful visitor attraction

In Leyburn, Alix Warland and Martin Crowson were typical of so many people I meet in the Dales.  For every person who can trace their family back over generations in the same village, there’s someone else who has moved in because they fell in love with the Dales.  And that love has caused them to throw themselves wholeheartedly into learning about their new home, and supporting its community.

As we drank our coffee, we fell to discussing the shopping in Leyburn.  Martin described it as “A totally difference experience to a lookalike high street.”  And, he commented, “There are three food stores, including one of the finest independents in the country.”

I had to agree.  I’ve bought things in Leyburn that I couldn’t find in other towns.  For instance, the household goods store in the former town hall, smack in the centre of the market place, is an Aladdin’s cave for the homemaker.

And Leyburn is a hidden gem for quality clothes and shoes, as well as food.

In fact, as I walked back to the car, a shop caught my eye, I nipped in for a browse – and came out with a new skirt.

A result for Leyburn!

Find out more about visiting Leyburn at www.welcometoleyburn.co.uk

Prof Dominic Powlesland

Prof Dominic Powlesland has spent decades studying the prehistoric landscape of Yorkshire

Over at Sutton Bank, Professor Dominic Powlesland, of the Landscape Research Centre, was explaining what they discovered when they dug a Bronze Age burial mound at Boltby Scar.  Such burial mounds pepper the Moors, and, he says, the remains of many more lie beneath the ploughed fields of the Vale of Pickering.

Traditionally, they were believed to be the burial place of an important personage, but Dominic’s work now points, he says, to longer term use as a burial site over hundreds of years, perhaps for a family or clan.

The barrow they dug at Boltby, he thinks, may be indicative of similar practices for other, similar looking barrows.  He says it revealed, “A long and complex history of both construction and robbing.”

They identified six phases of the life of the barrow.  Phase 1 was a stone ring, with large irregular limestone blocks laid on bed of pebbles.  They think it may have defined the area of a flat cemetery.  There was evidence of burning – perhaps funeral pyres?

Phase 2 was a turf mound within the stone ring.  There was lots of charcoal in the turf – carbonised hazel shells, indicating domestic activity.  Carbon 14 dating gave an age of around 1920-1730 BC.

They called phase 3 the ‘yellow mound’, as a thick deposit of yellow-brown clayey soil had been laid over the charcoaley soil of phase 2.

Phase 4 was a pebbly mound that covered over the yellow clay and extended to the stone ring.  It was made of clean silty soil with a layer of pebbles on the surface.

Phase 5 placed a wattle fence around the mound, with limestone slabs leaning up against the fence.  The vertical slabs of pale limestone, high on the escarpment, would have been visible from a considerable distance.

At phase 6, the whole mound , fence and stone rings were buried with a thick layer of fine silty soil.  Covering the limestone dimished its visibility in the landscape, but made the mound taller.

Dominic thinks that these phases probably developed over hundreds of years, starting around 2000 BC, in the early Bronze Age.  That is why he believes that it was used for many burials, not just one single person.

Whatever the significance of the mound to its original builders, the mound continues to draw people to it even today, around four thousand years later.

Read more about Dominic’s work at www.landscaperesearchcentre.org

Later this year, an exhibition of the findings at Boltby will be staged at Sutton Bank Vistor Centre.

Advanced student Alex Coode learns about historic ironwork at C Topp and Co

Advanced student Alex Coode learns about historic ironwork at C Topp and Co

Meanwhile, today, Chris Topp’s ironworks near Thirsk are attracting visitors from far and wide, who come to learn about his work with historic iron.

Although Chris also designs and makes brand new items, he has been involved with restoring historic iron work for decades.

He also does ‘practical archaeology’: making a replica of a historic artefact, in order to discover how it was made.  Much of this work has been filmed for TV, and he’s been involved in projects relating to a Roman Well, the Titanic, the Mary Rose, and even the Eiffel tower.

So when it was decided to form a body to provide proper training and qualifications for people working on valuable historic ironwork, it was natural that Chris should be involved.

The National Heritage Iron Group has been formed in order to provide training for a new generation of blacksmiths to continue learning the historic skills to care for our ironwork heritage.

www.christopp.co.uk

www.nhig.org.uk

Dalesman November 2011

158 squadron memorial includes the names of those who gave their lives

The 158 Squadron memorial is inscribed with the name of each serviceman who gave his life

In this November’s issue of Dalesman, I met the man who sculpted the memorial to 158 Squadron, Bomber Command, who flew from Lissett Airfield.

Every November, when Remembrance Day comes around, I hear yet another humbling story of the courage of ordinary people who were called upon to do extraordinary things.

‘Bluey’ Mottershead, who flew in 158 Squadron, told me: “Many people like myself didn’t consider being shot down.  We never thought about it. I had 14 gunners fly with me on operations, in all.  They told me the best way: my job was to fly; the navigator’s job was to get us there.”

‘Bluey’ was lucky enough to survive his time in Bomber Command, but many were less fortunate.

Peter Naylor, the artist who designed the Memorial sculpture at Lissett Airfield, studied as much as he could about the airmen he was commemorating.  He says, “Bomber Command ran missions every night from September 1939 until the end of the War.  ”

He adds, “When a plane was carrying 10 tons of incendiary bombs and 100 gallons of aviation fuel, if it was hit, it just vapourised into the sky.  The people in Bomber Command had the courage to keep going out, night after night, after seeing planes next to them just blow up and disappear.”

Peter said that he found many books, and that interest in the 1939-45 War doesn’t seem to be waning.  He speculates: “I think perhaps one reason for that is because it was absolutely a national war – everyone was involved, and the nation was united.”

Even after making the memorial, Peter is still discovering more about the men who served in 158 Squadron.  This is because he also made a miniature of the sculpture, and says, “People still come to buy the miniatures, and everyone has a story to tell.”

“I try to take the details of everyone who buys a miniature, like a little family.  I mean to compile all their stories into a dossier.”

The sculpture won the Marsh Award for Excellence in Public Sculpture, and Harry Irons accompanied Peter to collect the award.  Peter says, “Harry joined up when he was under age.  He knew that the life expectancy was about six weeks – he was a real hero.”

Peter says he’s never had a commission that means as much to him as the 158 Memorial, and he is now interested in making other Memorial Sculptures.  He has bid to make one to mark the contribution of the Women’s Land Army – so we may be hearing more of Peter Naylor and his work.

INFORMATION:

The 158 Memorial stands beside the road from Lissett to Gransmoor.

The Squadron Association holds an annual memorial service over the first weekend of September.  For details, see www.158squadron.co.uk, or telephone 0181 467 6775

Miniatures are available from Peter Naylor, who also gives talks about the Memorial.  Contact him on 01482 868311, or at www.peternaylor.co.uk

Craft&Design November/December 2011 issue

For Craft&Design’s November/December 2011  issue, I had the pleasure of meeting four more inspiring people.

I’m always impressed by the prodigious energy that the makers I meet pour into their work, but Yueh Yin Taffs was exceptional.  Vitality fizzed off her as she enthused about the horses she loves to sculpt.

As her words overflow, it becomes clear that she has given up two careers –  in the  highly desirable, competitive fields  of fashion design and television – in order to follow her dream of becoming a sculptor.  She pours all her passion into her sculpture, giving it emotion as well as attractive lines and shapes.  Horses and other animals are favourites, but she also enjoys recreating classic myths.

The life and energy in her works make it attractive to buyers, and, as word of her work spreads, Yeuh Yin expects to see more commissions.

www.yuehyintaffs.co.uk

Like Yueh Yin, Louise Gardiner also has endless energy for her work – energy she likes to infect others with via the workshops that she teaches.  She also pushes this energy into developing opportunities for people to see her work, whether at exhibitions, on the internet, or through other media such as TV, radio or books.

Louise, realises that no-one has an endless supply of energy: one day, even she will have to slow down.  So she’s planning for the future, by working on ranges such as greetings cards,  that can be reproduced and provide income without Louise having to make something new every time.

It’s a long –term strategy for a lady who shows no sign of running out of steam any time soon.

www.lougardiner.co.uk

Jan Beaney’s energy shows no sign of abating, despite decades as a fibre artist.  She managed to continue developing her career whilst bringing up a family, and since then, has travelled the world to teach embroidery – travels that provide inspiration for her own exhibition pieces.

And the more she does, the more ideas she gets.  So, defying the laws of physics, energy breeds even more energy.

www.doubletrouble-ent.com

Mike Goldmark uses his creative energy not to make art, but to bring art to buyers.  He cares deeply about art himself – which he defines as ‘stuff that moves you’.  From his shop in the market town of Uppingham, he has reached out to customers across the world.  And although, like anyone, he has to pay the bills, he puts much more into his business, commenting, “While we have to pay our way, it’s not the only reason why we’re here.  So we are busy doing things that have nothing to do with profit, but make us a magnet for like-minded people who enjoy the sort of things that we do.”

The result is a gallery that also publishes books, creates films, and holds events in its own auditorium – as well exhibitions.  Perhaps this is why potter Phil Rogers credits Mike with ‘revolutionising the way we present, sell and appreciate fine pottery in this country.”

www.goldmarkart.com

Read all about these inspirational people in Craft&Design, Oct/Nov 2011 issue.

Does a craft maker need an agent?

I’m now a blogger on Craft&Design’s website:

Having met hundreds of makers over the years, this question comes to me time and time again.  Musicians, actors, authors – so many people in the ‘creative industries’ have an agent.  So why not Craft Makers?

The agent  – or manager – manages publicity, commissions (aka sales) and contracts, allowing the ‘creative person’ to focus on being creative.  Sometimes they may charge a fixed fee, or be employed within the business.  But many managers are freelances who manage several ‘names’ and charge a commission to fund their services.

So could craft makers have agents?

I recently spoke to Jake Mee, a young man who recently achieved his dream of setting up his own glass blowing studio.  His story will go into a forthcoming issue of Craft&Design.

Jake had to save hard to set up  his studio – but he still has an ‘agent’, and a very good one too.

Jake’s Mother, Jo, had taken on the role.  As a mother myself, I saw at once that this was a ‘dream job’ – a job telling people how wonderful your adored son is!

But, Jo was good at it.  A capable administrator, she kept on top of correspondence, phone calls, mailing, and talking to visitors to the studio.  And while Jake took a holiday, she organised a new 25-piece exhibition for him.

Some might balk at being managed by Mother.  But Jake’s an independent adult who has developed an effective working relationship with someone who just happens to be a family member.  He says, “My Mother is good at marketing and talking to people.  So she does that, and it gives me more time to work with the glass.”

I can think of many other makers who would love to have the services of such an effective assistant.

See Jake’s studio and work at  http://www.smithbrookglassblowingstudio.co.uk/,

And you can see my, and other contributors’ blogs, at http://www.craftanddesign.net/blog/?p=148


Dalesman Magazine, September 2011

The new Dalesmans are out, with yet more insights into what makes Yorkshire such a great place to live, work, or take a holiday.

UNIVERSITY OF YORK DEPT OF ARCHAEOLOGY

The Archaeology Department is in a historic building in York

For this month’s edition, I visited Nicky Milner, an archaeologist at York University whose work had unearthed tantalising evidence that raises the question of whether there was a stone age settlement near Pickering.

She’s been working on the archaeology of Star Carr for decades and says, “The more we find, the more questions we bring up.  It’s my dream to get back and dig again.”

They have found remains of a house and a waterside ‘platform’ –  perhaps a pier, boardwalk, or wharf – towards one corner of a roughly traingular promontory jutting into the lake.  Test pits show more human acitivity on the rest of promotory.  Might there be more houses there?   Was it a base camp, a summer hunting lodge, or even a village?

It’s exciting because current thinking says that at this time, human activity in Yorkshire was limited to small groups of itinerant hunters.  But to build a platform requires lots of people to come together, and work together.  So this work could revolutionise beliefs about stone age society.

The stone age seems so long ago – but other evidence shows these people to be very like us: discoveries of beads show that they liked to make themselves look good, just as we do today.

Nicky and her colleagues are desperate to discover more – and time is running out.  Laboratory work this winter has proved that the valuable organic remains, having survived for 11,000 years, are beginning to decay.

The race is on to dig and find out more before the evidence is lost forever.

Read more about Nicky’s researches in Dalesman, and at www.starcarr.com

Woodalls of Malton is in the Market Place

Woodall's of Malton is housed in a historic building in the Market Place

Over in Malton, Winston Kobylka is doing his part to preserve traditional craft skills.

He says that he’d heard that Woodall’s was for sale, so went along to take a look.  He says that he walked in, liked it, and asked to buy it ‘just like that’.

He’s scathing of people who ask questions about business plans and how much money he expects to make.  “I’m not in it for that,” he says, “It’s that we’re sustainable and make ecological products which will safeguard the future.”

He believes that everything can’t be made abroad for ever, and hopes that Woodall’s will help to keep skills alive in Britain.  But, they are still dependent on imports for raw materials, and he says, “Sadly, economic times have us battling against costs of cotton, sisal and hessian.  Some is produced in the UK, but the majority is sourced overseas.”

And he adds, “Hessian or jute may spend 4 months at sea, during which time the price changes several times.  It’s to do with the futures market, currency fluctuations, and forward trading.”

It’s likely he knows what he’s talking about: he listed some of his previous jobs.  As well as working in historic building conservation, he’d done photography, basketry, technical work for the Department of Transport, translating, supply chain management, and, most recently, teaching economics.

Now he’s adding rope splicing to his many skills, but when he walks around his shop, he’s like a child in a toy shop, revelling in the sheer variety of the stock.

“Look at the glove cupboard,” he said, showing a large double cupboard filled with all sorts of gloves.  And the halters – for animals ranging from bulls to ferrets.  There were racks and racks of different sorts of string and rope, trays and drawers of knives, scissors, and equipment for sheep and lambs.

Woodall’s is one of those shops that’s full of ‘useful stuff’, and the more you look, the more you see.  And it’s well worth asking too – assistant Dilys has been there for twenty one years, and knows what’s there.

Many customers are farmers, and Winston says, “Canvas and tarpaulin covers for horse drawn wagons were the backbone of this business.  Now we use a lot of PU and PVC for tarpaulins, but still the main business is these covers, mainly for agricultural use.”

Covers to protect from weather will always be useful – and so too is the rope to tie them down.  Winston says, “The history of rope is fundamental to all industries.”

Woodall’s is in the centre of Malton,  www.gwoodall.com/

Roger Sedgwick, third generation farmer

Roger Sedgwick, dairy farmer, tests his grass for silage

Later  I ventured over the Pennines to Sedbergh, where I visited the Sedgwick family.   I was struck at how different the landscape was to the Moors and Pennine Dales that I see from my home in the Vale of Mowbray.

My nearest hills are the North York Moors, flat-topped and dark with heather.

The hills at the Sedgwicks’ farm on the Howgill Fells were very different: much higher, rounded, and a uniform soft light green colour.  From the distance of the lower slopes, they looked as if clad in apple-green velvet.

Roger explained they had rights for grazing the high fells, in addition to their own farmland lower down the hill.  His father Geoff keeps the Rough Fell sheep that are adapted to the area.  But he explained that many of the families that had farmed the fells in his youth have now given up farming.  The land is concentrating into fewer farms – who are keeping fewer sheep.

This could lead to the landscape changing again.  I consulted the Yorkshire Dales National Park website to find about the Howgills, and it said that, centuries ago, forest was cleared to make way for sheep farming.  Without the sheep, maybe one day this forest might return: Roger commented that gorse that had been cleared was now growing again on the fell.

Aside from the sheep, Roger also commented that administrators over the years had caused confusion in their location:  “We were in the West Riding of Yorkshire.  Now we’re under Cumbria County Council, we have a Lancaster Post Code, and we’re in the Yorkshire Dales National Park.”

Now, debate is raging as to whether more of this area should be taken into the Yorkshire Dales National Park.  There are views on both sides, and only time will tell who wins.

Meanwhile, there is no doubt that the Howgills are a strikingly different – and breathtaking – landscape.

Like all English landscapes, it’s a landscape that has been shaped by farming, and farming now is changing.  Smaller farms need to diversify to survive, and the Sedgwicks plan to do this by making ice cream.

However, it may not be such a new development after all.  Geoff recalls his father being involved in a number of business ventures: “He was a master cabinetmaker,” recalls Geoff.  “I came across someone with furniture he made, dated 1895, the year he came here.”

“He was into lots of things, though.  For three years, he had three farms – he gave two of them up after a few years.  He was also an insurance agent, and sold dips.”

He also built himself a nice new house, that the family now lets out to holidaymakers.

Roger adds, “He was also in the local Militia.  He guarded the King and Queen’s train at Sedbergh in 1917.  They stopped at the station and slept in the train overnight.”

Roger also says, pointing at a field now grazed by his cows:  “My Grandfather was also at Gallipolli.  When he came home, he walked up from Sedbergh Station in the evening, and next morning, he was ploughing that field.”

Nowadays, Roger cuts silage to feed his cows in winter, and his pastures are full of rich grass.  On the higher slopes, open with no fences or walls, his father Geoff’s Rough Fell sheep graze.

Roger now hopes that his latest addition to the family’s ventures, ice cream, will keep the family farming for another generation.

See www.holidaysedbergh.co.uk

email: sedgwick665@btinternet.com  Telephone: 01539 620252

Geoff’s Rough Fell Sheep are featured in “Kendal Rough Fell Sheep: the breed, the people and the furture”, published by the Rough Fell Breed Association, www.roughfellsheep.co.uk

Read everything in full in Dalesman Magazine, in print only, from good newsagents, or visit  www.dalesman.co.uk for a money-saving subscription.

Craft&Design Magazine, September 2011

The September 2011 issue of Craft&Design features a bumper selection of award-winning craft makers.

The magazine sponsors the Selected Awards, which are bestowed following a procedure of public vote followed by specialist judging.

So Selected winners have both peer and popular approval, making it an award that people love to achieve.

I had the pleasure of talking to Phil Rogers, the overall winner.  His achievements – even over so many years – were breathtaking.  He makes art pottery.  He sits on committees.  He builds kilns.  He teaches workshops.  He writes books.  He appears in films (about pottery, of course.)  He goes on tour – and talks to people like me.

No wonder the specialist judge, Geoff Cox, said that Phil shows strong committment!

But, despite all his activities, Phil is still a maker at heart.  He experiments with all the aspects of his craft: shape, colour, the technicalities of glazes and their interaction with the heat of the kiln.

And through these experiments, he is able to create something new, something unique.  And that is the satisfaction of his craft.

To read  the full article about Phil, buy Craft&Design Magazine by  clicking here. Read more about Phil in Craft&Design,

Or see to find a nearby stockist, click here.

Craft&Design, July/August 2011

This month’s issue of Craft&Design features a bumper crop of talented craftspeople who I had the pleasure of talking to.

From Bex Simon’s beautiful nature-inspired metal work, to Iain Broadbent’s detailed wood carving, to Jill Fanshaw-Kato’s carefully considered ceramics, their works combine function, decoration, and  art all in each individual piece.

Jill Fanshaw-Kato (http://www.jillfanshawekato.com/) was illuminating about the special place that ceramics have in the hearts of Japanese people.   Just a few days before the catastrophic earthquake and tsunami, Jill was explaining to me that Japan is a geologically active country, where it is easy to believe that the earth has a spirit of its own – a spirit channelled by the artists who create using  clay dug from the earth.

Sadly, her words were proved only too true when devastation struck.   She told me that potters in Japan had helped with the iconic Leach pottery in Cornwall, and now, the Leach pottery is fundraising to help fellow potters in Japan who suffered from the earthquake.  See http://www.leachpottery.com/What-s-On/News-Feed.aspx for details.

Bex Simon (http://www.bexsimon.com/)  is an artist blacksmith who has made a name for herself with many bespoke gates, railings and so on.  But with a baby on the way, she wanted to venture into product design as well.  So when an email from a TV company arrived, asking if she’d like to appear on a ‘reality show’ about business,  she decided to give it a go.

Appearing on TV was quite an experience – as Bex explains in her feature.  But the publicity it generated helped her new venture to go well, creating a new job for husband Dave.

Meanwhile, Iain Broadbent (http://www.iainbroadbent.co.uk/) works quietly and often alone, restoring detailed and intricate historic wood carvings.  But he also works on  his own contemporary designs, which are deceptively clean and crisp, belying the deep thought that has gone into their creation.

Whenever I speak with such craft makers , a joy in creativity shines through them.  I long to experience such a joy myself, but without kiln, forge or workbench, I have to satisfy myself with cooking dinner as my creativity for the day.

Hallo kitchen!

Meanwhile, you can read all about these makers in Craft&Design, see http://www.craftanddesign.net/stockists/map/ to find a local stockist, or order online.

DALESMAN MARCH 2011 JOHN WALKER WATCH REPAIRER

JOHN WALKER AT WORK

JOHN WALKER MAKING NEW PARTS TO REPAIR A WATCH

John Walker had a long career as a repairer of clocks and watches in Harrogate.

When I met him, he was retired – but he loved his work so much that he’d kept a few tools, so that he could still maintain his own clocks.

He explained that the first clocks had only one hand: knowing the hour was good enough in those days.  As he described how the clocks worked, how to repair them, and some of the different timepieces he’d worked on, I was interested to learn more about the history of timekeeping.

Looking at the history of timekeeping brings up the question ‘what is time?’  We all know how to tell the time: we look at our watch and it is, say 3.30.  Simple.  But once, this was cutting edge technology.

Before the invention of clocks, people told the time from the sun and the stars.  Sundials measured ‘temporal hours’ – each one a twelfth of the time between sunrise and sunset.  Therefore, the hours in summer really were longer, while in winter, the hours were short – twelve hours compressed into the brief period of light between sunrise and sunset.  Our fixed hours were only possible once someone had invented a clock.

Noon was the time when the shadow of the sundial was at its shortest, as the sun reached its highest point in the sky that day.  Due to the rotation of the earth, noon occurs at differing times at different longitudes (the imaginary lines running from the North Pole to the South Pole): Therefore, temporal noon in Scarborough, for instance, will occur slightly earlier than noon in Kendal.

In the Mediaeval period, people largely worked near home and accurate time keeping wasn’t necessary.  Furthermore, your work was your life: our modern day concept of selling our labour by the hour didn’t exist either.

In those days, the problem of accurately measuring time was cutting-edge science, a bit like studying sub-atomic particles today.

The ‘clockwork’ mechanisms we know evolved over the Mediaeval period.  The first such clocks were the preserve of the fabulously rich, and of large organisations.  It was the job of a watchman to check the town clock, and sound the hours.

Gradually, clocks became more widely available, but they were still set to local temporal time.  This didn’t matter until people began travelling quickly.  As railways began to cover the land, they found that varying local times were a problem – it even led to crashes.  So railways began keeping clocks at the stations, showing ‘railway time’.

Eventually, the Government took action, to set an official time for all parts of Britain.  And it used Greenwich Mean Time, a time standard that had been set up to help sailors to navigate the globe.

British Summer Time was instituted in 1916, as a wartime energy saving measure.  The clocks were advanced by an hour, allowing more daylight when people needed it.

According to the Greenwich Maritime Museum the idea was first suggested by one William Willett who enjoyed early morning rides in the summer.  He was incensed that, as he enjoyed the summer morning, many other people were still in bed.  So he proposed changing the clocks as a way of getting them up earlier to make use of the daylight, and save artificial lighting in the evening.

At first, his idea wasn’t liked.  But in 1916, Germany did it, and Britain, then at war, followed suit a few weeks later, creating British Summer Time.

All this, of course, can only happen because we have clocks.  Before mechanical clocks, when we told time by the sun, our rising and sleeping would automatically be related to dawn and dusk.

Changing the clocks raises people’s passions, and every autumn, when clocks go back and make it dark earlier in the evening, someone suggests we stay on BST for winter.

Moving the clocks, however, can’t actually create more light, and in winter, there is no escaping the short days.  BST means more light in the evening, but less light in the morning.

From 1986 to 1971 a three year experiment gave us ‘summertime’ – renamed ‘British Standard Time’ in winter.  Unsurprisingly, a review discovered pros and cons, especially the dark mornings, and we returned to GMT in winter.  I remember, as a child, going to school in the dark during that time – not much fun.

During the Second World War, we had ‘double summer time’ – BST in winter, then the clocks went forward another hour in summer.  Again, the aim was to save energy.  Therefore, some people are now suggesting we do this again, in the interest of saving energy to combat climate change.

Of course, anyone who wanted to take advantage of light summer mornings could simply get up earlier: what’s stopping them?

Today, most of use electronic quartz clocks and watches, rather than mechanical ones.  They too are the result of high technology, a spin off from space exploration.  But that’s another story.

Anyone interested in learning more about mechanical clocks, or finding someone to repair a clock, can contact the British Horological Institute, www.bhi.co.uk

Read the article in full in Dalesman Magazine, http://www.dalesman.co.uk/

Craft and Design – Nov/Dec 2010 issue

The new issue of Craft and Design is out, featuring a host of award-winning makers, plus advice for those starting or building their businesses.

I spoke to Ornella Iannuzzi, who grew up in the Alps, but now works in London.  Ornella  makes unique jewellery inspired by so many things: minerals from the mountains; woodlands; deep sea life; ‘Lucy’, the oldest know human fossil, and countless other things.  It’s amazing that so much knowledge and enthusiasm can reside in only one head.

Ornella had a technical training in France, followed by artistic training in England.  The result is a unique blend of ground breaking designs, executed with technical excellence.

Ornella is interested in so many things, and  so talented, that I feel she is one to watch: her fame can only grow.

The full article is available in print only, in Craft and Design Magazine, see http://www.craftanddesign.net/stockists/map/ for a stockist near you.

logo for craft and design magazine

See Ornella’s website at http://www.ornella-iannuzzi.com/

More Apprenticeships – this time in Textiles

After meeting apprentices for Dalesman, for Craft and Design I carried out a major review of all training opportunities for careers in Textiles.

Apprenticeships in textiles are so rare that many people believe there are none.  But after weeks on the trail, I eventually discovered that there are a few, rare, specialised apprenticeships available in textiles.

And they are well worth taking, as there is a skills shortage in the sector.

But – do the wrong course, and you won’t have the skills you need.

So, if you want a career in textiles, where should you start?  Apprenticeship, degree course, evening classes, private tuition?

Craft and Design this month publishes a special report, investigating the pros and cons of all these, and other options.

If you’re interested in a career in textiles – either first time, or second time around – see what you could do in the Sept- Oct edition of Craft and Design Magazine.

Craft and Design Magazine website: http://www.craftanddesign.net/