Luddite Love
How can I claim to be a Luddite when I love my iPhone? If I am not a Luddite then how can I be a hand weaver in the 21st Century? Existential crisis! This was brought on by a tragic submersion of my beloved iPhone in soapy dishwater. I felt like I was in mourning. No 3:00 am crossword puzzles, no tic-ish email checking, no calendar synching- despair!!
This has all brought on the dreaded “mulling”. Why DO I weave. I can’t (yet) make a living at it. I am very lucky if I can cover my materials and heat at this point. I went to a local GIANT fabric warehouse called Osgoods to buy some pillowforms lately, and I had to laugh at how very little NEED there is in the world for more fabric. So why? The answer I came up with has to do with evolution (you can stop reading now if you would like).
Could my relationship to fabric be encoded in my DNA. I certainly feel a core connection to fabric and fiber – from the baby blanket to the wedding dress fabric IS meaningful, but I don’t kid myself that this is universal human connection. But could there be an evolved state of satisfaction in effortful process and product – a state that is (contrary to the ad world’s promises) unreproducible by purchased effort?
Beautiful, memorable fabrics can be purchased – sometimes for less than the yarns needed to weave them and definitely for less than the combined costs of looms, equipment, space AND yarn.
I read recently that humans have evolved to see and value effort. I think that the effort expended in industrial processes (whether cars, fabric or iPhones) is too diffuse and complex for us to react to in the same way as we can to something handmade. We can love and appreciate things that our industrially produced products allow us to do or do for us, but the appreciation we feel for them is quite different than what we feel for handmade things. And the feelings we have for things we have produced ourselves – particularly things that have taken skill and effort – are worlds apart from the satisfaction of purchasing something pleasing.
This is where the problem comes in. It is really crazy to be a hand weaver today, and most people know it. I think that the craze for Triathlons, Ironman runs, Marathons, etc. is explained by the fact that we LONG for the satisfaction of something produced by our personal effort and skill – something tangible – not a process that is part of a larger process. However, we can’t face the ridiculousness of producing something that can be industrially produced faster, better and for less, so we turn to the grit and effort of working on our bodies which can’t (yet) be industrially exercised. This gives us (well, not me) the satisfaction of personal and sustained effort and skill development without the embarrassment of spending money and time on something not valued by the culture at large.
Sooooo – why weave? One could answer, “Why paint?” “Why write?” but our culture does value “art” at least once it has been proven, but sadly there is almost no status in craft. Sooooo, why weave? I guess in the final analysis – because I can and because I can’t not!! And as to my iPhone . . . I love it because it keeps me connected to my fellow weavers, it allows me to catalogue all my weaving books and it has very excellent measuring app – FOR WEAVING.
Marlene Toerien
HI Elisabeth, as my daughter is travelling to Howick, in Natal to go and swim the Midmar Mile, which you won’t recognise or know, what you say about the appreciation of craft, and triathalons, marathons, Iron man competitions are so true. I usually get why do you weave?, or do people still weave?, and then few and far in between I get how lovely, keep on weaving nobody else is doing what you do. Most of the time I am weaving as a method of stash control. I know I can’t stop now before I have used up all the yarn that I have now.
Keep well
Marlene Toerien
Elisabeth Hill
Thanks for the comment Marlene,
I love that all the angst comes down to USE UP ALL THE YARN:) A truly worthy goal (I keep wondering what using up more stash yarn will do to my studio heat loss – I defend it as upping my insulation factor!)
Claire
That is an interesting take on why people do physical challenges etc.
I think that the urge to make or work with cloth comes from some deep primodal part of the brain. After all, it was a matter of survival until very recently. Some people might be more successful at suppressing it that others lol.
Elisabeth Hill
Hi Claire – I feel the same way – encoded with fiber love! As you say, it has been a matter of survival until quite recently, at least for those of us who dwell in the northern climes. I do feel like weaving/knitting/making is a balm for the existential uneasiness of modern life no matter what its value in the marketplace.