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Anyone can pick up a pair of needles and a ball of yarn. And
everyone can be mindful. Mindfulness in Knitting casts fresh
light on this renowned calming craft, and reveals how the act of
“knit and purl” can be the epitome of conscious living. Ethical
textile artist Rachael Matthews unpicks the threads of this popular
pastime to explore how knitting connects us to each
other and to the world around us. Through personal anecdote
and expert insight, she unravels the true value of what it means to
craft, its therapeutic benefits, and the joys of mindful making.
This book is divided into chapters which will teach us to:
Find our place through yarn, Knit sacred spaces,
Build knitting circles and connecting with others through
craftivism, The art of gifting our creations How knitting
helps us discover ourselves. Filled with practical examples,
personal insights and creative exercises for you to try at home,
this book is suited for knitters of any ability, and will help you
whether you want to relieve stress, build
self-awareness or improve your mental
health through the creative act of knitting. This book is
from the Mindfulness series, a range of titles
dedicated to exploring the mindful lifestyle, including Mindfulness
in Gardening, Mindfulness in Drawing, Mindfulness in Baking, and
Mindfulness in Wild Swimming.
A cutting edge edited collection investigating the range of
meanings associated with the local newspaper, its future and,
ultimately, the value of its continued existence. Includes
contributions from a range of scholars engaged with researching the
local newspaper and its relationship to place, people and
commercial imperatives. Explores how local newspapers function in
different cultures and contexts through an array of case studies
from such countries as Spain, Ireland, Denmark, the UK and the US.
A cutting edge edited collection investigating the range of
meanings associated with the local newspaper, its future and,
ultimately, the value of its continued existence. Includes
contributions from a range of scholars engaged with researching the
local newspaper and its relationship to place, people and
commercial imperatives. Explores how local newspapers function in
different cultures and contexts through an array of case studies
from such countries as Spain, Ireland, Denmark, the UK and the US.
It’s time to reconsider the value of our waste. In the past these
were valuable commodities you could sell on. Gathering rag and
turning it into yarn was rich in the possibility of making things.
This Manifesto is a unique, artist’s view of the traditional art
of rag rug making for this age of the Anthropocene. Projects made
in the artist’s studio and with a community group, highlight a
reverence for our lost textiles, a response to the environmental
impact of fast fashion and a proof that rag is a rich resource,
wrongly classed as a taboo material. In this book Rachael Matthews
gives us permission to cut up our old fabrics offering a support
structure for decision making and a chart on how to make liberating
decisions about destroying a garment – be it ‘Worn Out
Emotional’, or ‘Brand New and Guilty' – and how our actions
can develop community as well as our own self-esteem. A modernist
interpretation of rag weaving European modernist painters, such as
Ben and Winifred Nicholson, became interested in Rag Rug making in
the 1920s. Picasso inspired freedom in creativity, using found
materials and recognising that ‘primitive’ art was highly
skilled. The art world missed a trick in not accepting these
painterly rag works as true art and many have been lost. A century
later, post pandemic, the need for a community to gather and make
textiles was strengthened by a shared concern about the textile
waste found on the streets where they live. This led to the artist
founding Rag School, an on-line studio to rediscover the lost ways
of making things. This led to a real-life rag studio with East
London Textiles Arts, piloting ways that diverse communities
everywhere could re-learn how to process textile waste in beautiful
ways, caring for each other along the way. The transformation of
waste has been a valuable remedy in recovering from the collective
trauma of the pandemic: ripping is thrilling, storytelling
cathartic, and the craft work a great place of focus and thought.
The economic value of rag Textile manufacture is the second largest
contributor to climate change and damage to the environment. The
psychological impact that fast fashion imposed on us, has blurred
our ability to see the potential of the materials we throw away.
Popularity of handicrafts such as patchwork and dressmaking has led
to an increase in knowledge of loveable, sustainable materials, but
we often turn a blind eye to the more problematic fabrics. Some
synthetic materials are unlikely to ever break down, while Itchy
uniforms, saggy Lycra, odd socks, uncomfortable underwear and
vulgar fashion statements come to their ‘end of life’ too soon.
This book helps to break down all fears of what to do next with the
rag pile. The stuff you loved can stay with you forever and the
stuff you hated can be loved and laughed over in ways you never
thought possible. Includes the techniques of plaiting; Welsh
weaving sticks; peg loom; rigid heddle weaving; proddy on hessian;
loomless weaving and passementerie.
Regional newspapers around the globe are fighting to survive in the
face of challenges to their economic model, due to the constant
influx of new technology. At the same time, while studies of the
national press have created a continuous narrative on the
newspaper, the history of the regional press has been subject to
relatively little academic scrutiny, despite being a significant
industry in terms of a readership, circulation and profit. By
focusing on provincial English newspapers, Matthews makes the case
for the larger issue of the future of local newspapers worldwide.
She argues that a comprehensive approach to the history of the
regional press can result in a conceptualization of the industry in
terms of the shift in emphasis between the key elements of state
control, ownership, social influence and production techniques.
They can be categorized into six distinct stages: the local
newspaper as opportunistic creation; the characterization of the
local newspaper as fourth estate; the impact of New Journalism; the
growth of chain control, the shock of the free paper and new
technology and finally, the current picture, the search for a new
business model.
Drawing on expert contributions from around the UK, this collection
brings together a series of insights into the contemporary local
and community news media landscape in the UK. Offering an analysis
of the ongoing 'crisis' in the provision of local news, exacerbated
by the COVID-19 pandemic, the book provides a critical space for
practitioners and scholars to reflect on emerging models for
economically sustainable, participatory local news services. It
showcases new scholarly analyses of local news provision and
community news practices, giving voice to the experiences of
practitioners from across the local news ecology. In a set of
diverse contributing chapters, campaigners and practitioners map
out the period of recent rapid change for local news, questioning
contemporary government initiatives and highlighting the advent of
diverse, entrepreneurial reactions to the spaces created by a
decline in local mainstream news services. This book is a timely
examination of what we can learn from the variety of approaches
being taken across the local media landscape in the commercial,
subsidised and non-profit sector, shining new light on how
practices that place the engagement of citizens at their centre
might be propagated within this policy and funding landscape.
Reappraising Local and Community News in the UK is a valuable
resource for students and scholars interested in local news and
journalism, as well as for anyone interested in the evolving local
media landscape in the UK.
Regional newspapers around the globe are fighting to survive in the
face of challenges to their economic model, due to the constant
influx of new technology. At the same time, while studies of the
national press have created a continuous narrative on the
newspaper, the history of the regional press has been subject to
relatively little academic scrutiny, despite being a significant
industry in terms of a readership, circulation and profit. By
focusing on provincial English newspapers, Matthews makes the case
for the larger issue of the future of local newspapers worldwide.
She argues that a comprehensive approach to the history of the
regional press can result in a conceptualization of the industry in
terms of the shift in emphasis between the key elements of state
control, ownership, social influence and production techniques.
They can be categorized into six distinct stages: the local
newspaper as opportunistic creation; the characterization of the
local newspaper as fourth estate; the impact of New Journalism; the
growth of chain control, the shock of the free paper and new
technology and finally, the current picture, the search for a new
business model.
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