Showing posts with label Folk at the Forge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Folk at the Forge. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 July 2014

Champagne and Real Ale



Jim, me, Chris, Mike

The cryptic title of this post refers to the very different refreshments available at the two very different events I attended since my last post (Whenever that was!!) First was a brilliant afternoon/evening at Fransham Forge, the annual Folk at the Forge, hosted by the estimable Master Blacksmith Nigel . This year the weather was a great improvement on last lear,and we didn't need the roaring brazier to keep us warm! Much Real Ale was consumed - not by me, I hasten to add - and much music was played and enjoyed. The event coincided with a weekend course Nigel was running for blacksmiths, so there were lots of people around, as they bring their families and make a holiday of it.


A great BBQ was provided, cooked on the BBQ Nigel had forged that very morning! We took food for the communal table and there was more than enough for all.



This year we had trestle tables and benches, which was an improvement in one way on last year, but a little awkward for us box players, you had to sit a bit awry to play!




No photos of me this year but I was there, I promise! I love events like this, just chillin' and playin', great fun and totally relaxed.


Roger the Pipes


Mr Rob King 'gotchering' me as I 'gotchered' him!

The second, and more important event, was our grandson Chris's Graduation Day on Friday just gone. He is at Staffordshire University, and the awards ceremony was held at the very lovely Trentham Gardens, a beautiful setting and the weather was terrific - about 31 degrees we reckoned!




The ceremony was everything you'd expect , well run, entertaining, and emotional. The speeches were short and to the point, and the young people thoroughly immersed in the event. I hope all of them have happy and successful futures. The pride of the parents, friends and relatives was palpable, not least our own. What a wonderful way to celebrate all the hard work and achievement of our young people. We are so proud of Chris.


My Boys, Chris and his dad Mike


Look what I spotted hanging around the grounds ...


Brilliant, eh?

So despite the heat and the long drive there and back it was a day I wouldn't have missed for the world, and I'm sure those of you who have done similar will agree. So no textiles this week - and my A Year in Books has dropped off the scene I'm afraid; I HAVE read lots of books but have't got round to taking photos and making notes. I may pick it up later but I suspect there isn't much point any more!

Hope you are all enjoying the sunshine, and girding up your loins for the holidays!

Thursday, 16 January 2014

My 2nd Blogaversary


Yes, two years ago today I started this blog. It began as a record of textile makes a friend and I were preparing for craft fairs. As it happens, that particular venture didn't come to fruition, but I found I was enjoying taking photographs and writing a bit about this and that. So although the blog changed in content over time, I'm still enjoying putting my posts together and keeping in touch with other bloggers, and those of you who so kindly and regularly leave a comment.

With better techno skills I might have made a better job of organising this post into a nice chronological story, but I'm afraid despite spending hours trying upload from various sources the photographs are all higgledy-piggledy. But I hope you get the drift. Here then are some high-spots in the last two years of Textile Treasury. First up, some photos, including the one above, taken in June 2012 when our son Kit and his family came home from New Zealand for a long holiday. We all squeezed into our cottage, and the weather was dreadful most of the time, but we had some fun. You can find the relevant posts in the archive.


Krissie's 40th birthday party held at our local because there were so many of us! Dylan and Fraser.


                                               Beccie, Krissie and Kit THe Birthday.




January February 2013 - Jim and I flew out of a snow-bound Britain to sun-soaked New Zealand. This was our trip to Hobbiton, a scorcher of a day with some wonderful photographs to remember it by.


JIm and I on a day out with Kit and Krissie to a wonderful winery. Great scenery and lovely meal.


The day we all went ot the Sky Tower in Auckland. Standing on the glass floor was a challenge!


While we were there I made some small repairs to the Bible Quilt I had made for Dylan about five years earlier. Well loved and well worn!


Back home again, finishing off the quilt I made for Krissie.


One of the cushions I made with the vintage Sufolk Puffs purchased from A Mermaid's Tale.


A seaside cushion made, and sold. The craft fairs didn't work out but somehow things manage to get themselves sold!


Another cushion, made with vintage and re-purposed fabrics. I'm rather pleased with this one.


And who can forget the ongoing story of the Wild Garlic! I picked it, I wrote about it, I cooked with it, I froze it, and by gum we certainly ate a lot of it! Again, stories in the archive if you like.


 The Ouse Washes Molly Dancers - Musical Branch! This was taken up at Ely Cathedral just before the massed sides Processional through the City .


Stopping to dance in Ely. It was a very hot day and there was much more to come!



Very late one night at the Burwell Bash, just managing to keep up with the session. This is my annual music fix. More stories and incriminating pictures archived!

 On our way out to dinner for Jane's birthday, during the Burwell Bash 2013


Oh! Back to Ely, this is the Ouse Washes up at the Ely Festival site. In the middle of a field in temperatures of around 34 centigrade!


 A well deserved breather at Ely.


Ouse Washes at Welbourne Festival. Much cooler and wetter than Ely!


This was Folk at The Forge, hosted by the Harmonious Blacksmith Nigel - a great time was had by all!


My first forays into lino- printing, following a workshop by Amanda Colville. You can read about it - yes, you guessed it, in the ARCHIVE!


OH! Slipped back twelve months to a collection of items I made for the craft fair.


Here is the original "One Bird upon a Hill beneath a Star. I've now made and sold three of these, but this is my favourite still.


A spate of furniture painting! I painted them OUTSIDE, by the way, just photographed them here as it began to rain. Eventually I will finish the other chairs!


There was much bread making over the past two years, plain strong bread flour, spelt and rye, sour-dough, wholemeal, you name it, I baked it!


This spice corner of my kitchen references the Great Clear Out and Re-Organisation which took place in 2012. This extended to freezer sorting and recording, and menu planning posts and frugal food posts ....... habits which astoundingly have lasted into 2014!


Wild Garlic Pesto!


Wild Garlic Oil. I still have wild garlic butter in the freezer! It won't be too long before I start picking fresh supplies!

Lots of music making, dancing, festival going, family gathering, garden-photographing, textile viewing, caravanning, quilt making, bangle making, felt loving, friends gathering, food enjoying, and of course - BLOGGING! Sorry the photos aren't in order, and are woefully short of the whole story, but I hope you've enjoyed the memories. Two years isn't all that long in blogging circles, but it's been long enough to find some really good blogs which I enjoy regularly keeping in touch with, and some super bloggers, some of whom I have made friends with. Sorry, blogging does not confer upon you the inability to end a sentence with a preposition!

So however this blog evolves, I do hope those of you who have stuck it out so far will stick around for what's to come - I couldn't do it without you!

Monday, 3 June 2013

Folk at the Forge


Rob, Julie, me, Jan, Colin on piano accordian, Roger on Uillean pipes. Early starters at the Folk at the Forge BBQ. This is an annual event at Fransham Forge, in Norfolk, owned by Nigel Barnett, Master Artist- Blacksmith, flute/whistle player and all round Good Bloke.


                                                 Nigel and Sue, woodwind section!


                                                Magnificent entrance to Nige's kingdom.


The Gallery - here you can see examples of Nige's work and photographs of previous commissions and press coverage. His work is sought after as far away as Saudi-Arabia, Russia, Australia.


So much to say about Nigel's work, but you are better off going to his website http://artist-blacksmith.co.uk and you can see his work, and read about all the good stuff he does. At a session in a pub last year I met a delightful young man who came in dressed almost in Amish fashion; these, he explained , were his Journeyman clothes and he had come from the Netherlands as a journeyman blacksmith to work as Nigel's apprentice. They come from all over Europe to work with him.

                                                                 Game of Thrones?

                                          Jim examining some of the wares in the Gallery.


                                              One of the old farm vehicles Nigel reconditions.

                                                                      Shepherd's Hut.

                                                  Alternative living accommodation!

 Some of the iron sculptures to be found as you wander through the woodland around the forge.



The Showman's Van, reconditioned by Nigel. You can buy a truck or a shepherd's hut, fully kitted out with pot-bellied stove  to keep you toasty warm.


The ingenious and wonderful BBQ. We all took something for the communal table inside the marquee.


                                                          Marquee central heating!

                                                       Rob and Lynne get the boxes out!

                                         Young dancer, totally unfazed by her audience.



And so it went on, into the small hours, though it was chilly, not quite June weather! What a splendid day it was, good food, great company and (ahem) brilliant music! Oh, and some really good beer, local Real Ale, Beeston Brewery. I don't drink beer, but I tried some, very hoppy, I'm sure if I DID drink, this would be my beer of choice! Rob had my share..............

Thanks to my lovely Jim who took most of today's photos, And sampled a little Beestons Beer as reward..........