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Linda Rhodes, button collector |
The
Riverbend Fiber Arts Guild had the pleasure of hearing button collector,
Linda Rhodes, talk about buttons and her extensive collection at the July guild meeting.
In her presentation, Linda provided information about the history of buttons, the various materials from which buttons are made and the categories that collectors use to define their buttons— linear, contour and realistic.
Interesting button history:- While women were still lacing up their garments in the 18th century (hold it in, ladies, while we lace you up), buttons were being used on men's suits, shirts, cuffs and knee pants.
- Did you know that in the Victorian era, the buttons on women's mourning dresses were matte black? Only after an appropriate mourning period could shiney black buttons be used.
- Before garments were discarded, the buttons—considered too valuable to discard—were clipped off and saved in the "button box."
- In the late 1950s, "studio buttons" were made by artists and specifically sold to collectors.
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Vases of button flowers and button cookies. |
Show and Tell
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Veronica Hofman Ortega is published in Summer Belle Armoire magazine. (left) Kathy Swift-Lawson shows her alpaca yarn. (right) |
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Pat shows a lace shrug she made from just two knitted rectangles! |
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Needle felting and hand spun alpaca yarn. |
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A hand woven shawl. (left) Hand spun art yarns. (right) |
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Guild members attended a workshop on the magic loop technique and learned how to add beads to knit fingerless gloves. |
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Crocheted kitchen scrubbies. |
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A shrug made from hand-dyed yarn combines knitting and crochet. |
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