Fabric of Society

Rosa Tolnov Clausen and Stine Linnemann

This is an on-going podcast series, looking at society through the gaze of textile making. Created by PhD in Crafts Rosa Tolnov Clausen and artist Stine Linnemann, who both trained as weavers. Join us, as we look at the world through the veil of textiles, examining everything from handmade hobbycrafts, the industrialisation, gender roles, social hierarchies, sustainability, the impact of natural disasters and much, much more. Funded by Nordic Culture Fund (season 1) and The Danish Arts Foundation (season 2).

Episodes

  1. (3 of 3) Nordic Looms - Digital Weaving Norway

    Feb 27

    (3 of 3) Nordic Looms - Digital Weaving Norway

    In this episode we travel to Moss in Norway to visit Vibeke Vestby, who founded Digital Weaving Norway in 1995. We trace the development of their TC looms from Vibeke’s early experience as a hand weaver to where the company is today. Thanks to an innovation grant from the Norwegian state, as well as a close collaboration with Tronrud Engineering, Digital Weaving Norway has been able to cater not only to craft interested handweavers but also work closely with institutions and researchers working in the field of technical innovation.  During our visit in Norway, we had the opportunity to visit the production sites of Digital Weaving Norway as well as their close collaborators Tronrud Engineering. We interviewed Vibeke Vestby who also invited us into her personal weaving workshop to see her archive of handwoven fabrics and collection of weaving books. To watch the interview in full please visit: https://youtu.be/E4DIU1GIjvA  In this podcast series we are exploring loom production in the Nordic region over the past 150 years and up until today. Weaving is known as a tool-heavy craft and most weavers are aware that there exists different kinds of looms, but little attention has been paid to loom design and its influence on the craft of textile making. Fabric of Society is a collaboration between PhD in Crafts Rosa Tolnov Clausen and artist Stine Linnemann. The Nordic Looms series is funded by The Danish Arts Foundation. Soundscape by Marco Madia. Relevant links for this episode: Digital Weaving Norway: https://digitalweaving.no/ Rosa Tolnov Clausen https://rosatolnovclausen.com/ Stine Linnemann https://www.stinelinnemann.com/ Marco Madia https://www.marcomadia.com/

    29 min
  2. (2 of 3) Nordic Looms - Toika

    Feb 27

    (2 of 3) Nordic Looms - Toika

    In this episode we visit the loom manufacturer Toika, based in Toijala in Finland. The company has existed for almost 130 years, starting with reed production and later transitioning to making hand looms, which is still their main business to this day. Technical innovation and changing conditions for manufacturing has influenced Toika’s operations across the decades from industrialisation to the emergence of computers. We spent a couple of days in Toijala, where we met the family that runs Toika to this day. Here we had the opportunity to interview the current owner Jukka Yrjölä and his wife Mona, who also showed us around the production sites and shared their company archives with us. To watch the interview in full please visit: https://youtu.be/enBvBMmbjnI  In this podcast series we are exploring loom production in the Nordic region over the past 150 years and up until today. Weaving is known as a tool-heavy craft and most weavers are aware that there exists different kinds of looms, but little attention has been paid to loom design and its influence on the craft of textile making. Fabric of Society is a collaboration between PhD in Crafts Rosa Tolnov Clausen and artist Stine Linnemann. The Nordic Looms series is funded by The Danish Arts Foundation. Soundscape by Marco Madia. Relevant links for this episode: Toika https://www.toika.com/en/home/ Rosa Tolnov Clausen https://rosatolnovclausen.com/ Stine Linnemann https://www.stinelinnemann.com/ Marco Madia https://www.marcomadia.com/

    18 min
  3. (1 of 3) Nordic Looms - Lervad

    Feb 27

    (1 of 3) Nordic Looms - Lervad

    In this first episode we are visiting the archives of the Danish loom manufacturer Lervad in Vejen, Denmark. They made looms for hand weaving from 1895 until around the 1980s. In the late 1800s we see a reemergence of weaving in Denmark, particularly at the folk high school Askov, which leads to the founding of Lervad. We look at how social changes and reforms during this time influences the craft of weaving and loom-making specifically.  While we were in Vejen we attended a talk about Lervad by textile archeologist Kathrine Vestergaard Brandstrup, who was kind enough to give us an exclusive interview afterwards. To watch the interview in full please visit: https://youtu.be/CVN59mu1Vjs  In this podcast series we are exploring loom production in the Nordic region over the past 150 years and up until today. Weaving is known as a tool-heavy craft and most weavers are aware that there exists different kinds of looms, but little attention has been paid to loom design and its influence on the craft of textile making. Fabric of Society is a collaboration between PhD in Crafts Rosa Tolnov Clausen and artist Stine Linnemann. The Nordic Looms series is funded by The Danish Arts Foundation. Soundscape by Marco Madia. Relevant links for this episode: Kathrine Vestergaard Brandstrup: https://textilarkeolog.dk/ Vejen Local Archive: https://sonderskov.dk/vejen-lokalarkiv/om-vejen-lokalarkiv Rosa Tolnov Clausen: https://rosatolnovclausen.com/ Stine Linnemann: https://www.stinelinnemann.com/ Marco Madia: https://www.marcomadia.com/

    23 min

About

This is an on-going podcast series, looking at society through the gaze of textile making. Created by PhD in Crafts Rosa Tolnov Clausen and artist Stine Linnemann, who both trained as weavers. Join us, as we look at the world through the veil of textiles, examining everything from handmade hobbycrafts, the industrialisation, gender roles, social hierarchies, sustainability, the impact of natural disasters and much, much more. Funded by Nordic Culture Fund (season 1) and The Danish Arts Foundation (season 2).