Dr Katharine Edgar
@katharineedgar.bsky.social
1.7K followers 1.5K following 1.1K posts
Historical fiction writer, recreational Tudor and mistress of many obsolete crafts. History, textiles, costume, more history
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Reposted by Dr Katharine Edgar
Love the magical way the light falls in our Red Dining Room.
#windowsonwednesday #diamondpanes #photography #shadows
Ugh.

Go to @jorvikviking.bsky.social instead, they have real people who know loads. Or one of the re-enactments - @kentwellhall.bsky.social had Vikings last weekend - where you will get a much richer multisensory experience and there will be people doing real things.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
AI Viking character unveiled in Orkney museum - BBC News
It is part of a permanent exhibition to celebrate the role of the Vikings in the area's history.
www.bbc.co.uk
Reposted by Dr Katharine Edgar
So nice to hear we have had an impact.

‘The 37-year-old first got a taste for the trade aged nine, when he met a thatcher at a Tudor re-enactment at Kentwell Hall in Long Melford - a thatcher who is his colleague today.’

#thatching #historicbuildings #heritagecrafts

www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
'Safeguard thatching or Suffolk areas risk losing character'
It is estimated there are about 25,000 buildings with thatched roofs that are listed.
www.bbc.co.uk
Reposted by Dr Katharine Edgar
jeez read the room charlie brooker we don’t need another season of black mirror right now
can’t you try doing like a ‘rose tinted mirror’
I have never wished I still taught Collections Management before, but….
A story for #WorldRatDay 🐀📚

I wrote to the Curator to send me a rat.
She sent me...
I suppose the problem is they stopped dismembering corpses after the medieval period. If only they had continued.
This reminds me of when my daughter was at infants and had to choose a letter of the alphabet and draw an animal that began with it.
She drew a voose.
I asked her what a voose was.
‘It’s like a moose only it begins with V.’
The penny has only just dropped that ‘Weald’ meant forest, like Wald in German and of course wold.
I just got in from a run and my 15 year old son said to me,
‘You know, if I saw you running I’d think how amazing it is that an old person can run.’

🤨
I am totally up for cheese for Mother’s Day but if you’re a cheese head it’s hardly going to be mozzarella 😮
Yes, two loops instead of one so a greater volume of thread running along the edge.
Now it’s just a question of seeing if I can get the right effect with stitches the right length and amplitude. Turns out it’s really simple to do once you know how. 🫤
I will probably experiment with stitching on a plait at some point too.
There are a couple of early shirts in Janet Arnold with a twist or plait sewn along the edge which is a possibility but doesn’t look quite the same. I have tried blanket stitch and it takes forever and doesn’t look right. So now I am trying a more complex stitch which will be quicker.
#16thc blackworked linens often show a thick black edging like in this #Holbein sketch of Thomas Vaux. So it’s a question of how they did the edging: couched cord? Blanket stitch very close together? Or another stitch altogether?
Ok I think I have nailed it and I think it’s going to do the job I want (brief thread follows)
I’m going to try to learn Elizabethan double twisted chain stitch now, please pray for me.

#blackwork #embroidery #historicembroidery #costume #needlework #crafts
Yes, it’s from Elizabethan Stitches. Tent stitch is perfectly good, I don’t know why anyone would feel the need to torture themselves with other stitches, lol.