Weaving Is Healing Brisbane June 2023

This is a opportunity to join René Bahloo from Weavery, to sit and weave together in circle. It’s much more than a skill-building, tuition-based workshop; it is a space where wisdom is shared, experienced and breathed together as the workshop unfolds itself, wrapped with the fibre of life as well as the fibre of nature, and deep human connection.

Don’t miss out on this opportunity to learn and share, and celebrate our humanness and fibre together, as we weave ourselves together in loving connection.

You will learn to create a basket with pandanus fibre from Arnhem Land while immersing in deep connection to story, land, nature and to life.

10.30am till 3.30 pm. $120 pp

The workshop will be facilitated through means of a ceremonial space where you will be nurtured and held safely in a circle of like-minded beings, sharing and breathing and creating together.

This is an opportunity to experience the ancient art of basket weaving as a deeply mindful and contemplative practice. It is a space of sharing, creating, being and breathing, conducted through ceremony and celebration of life. Using natural materials from the land, you will learn to weave individual strands of fibre together to form a whole creation, while recognising and acknowledging the mirrors and metaphors that bind us together with nature and each other.

Like a weave within a weave, this has the power of revealing a way of being that is nurturing, growthful, enlightening and honouring of the energy of creation. Together we will weave baskets that hold in their fibres all of the stories we share, flowing in symphony with the songs of nature as they unfold around and within us.

Extra pandanus fibre will be available to buy on the day, if needed for future weaving projects or expansion of your current one.

Please bring a chair, cushion or mat to sit on, and something savoury to share for lunch.

Tickets can be booked online or by emailing to organise a direct deposit / cash. (direct deposit bypasses the eventbrite fee).

weaverywork@gmail.com

(0438)162552

Weaving is Healing Bribie Island

Workshop 1: 25 June 2023: With a coiling technique, we will create a basketling or set of earrings with the amazing and unique fibre of Pandanus spiralus.

Workshop 2: We will create a medicine pot using a double strand twisting technique using pandanus spiralus from Arnhem Land and a selection of local fibres.

The workshops will be facilitated through means of a ceremonial space where you will be nurtured and held safely in a circle of like-minded beings, sharing and breathing and creating together. Trauma informed, please let me know by private communication if you would like your circumstances to be known, and gently held.

Beginners are celebrated.

This is an opportunity to experience the ancient art of basket weaving as a deeply mindful and contemplative practice. It is a space of sharing, creating, being and breathing, conducted through ceremony and celebration of life. Using natural materials from the land, you will learn to weave individual strands of fibre together to form a whole creation, while recognising and acknowledging the mirrors and metaphors that bind us together with nature and each other. Like a weave within a weave, this has the power of revealing a way of being that is nurturing, growthful, enlightening and honouring of the energy of creation. Together we will weave baskets that hold in their fibres all of the stories we share, flowing in symphony with the songs of nature as they unfold around and within us.

This is one of a series of two workshops. Two days, two different techniques and fibres. Workshops can be attended individually, or can be booked as a duo. (Discounts apply for multiple day bookings).

May 27 – Pandanus coiling

July 1 – Pandanus, lomandra and cordyline double strand twist weave

Please bring a low chair, cushion or blanket to sit on, and vegetarian savoury lunch to share.

Tickets can be booked online (includes booking fee) or by emailing me to organise a direct deposit (no booking fees).

weaverywork@gmail.com

0438162552

Weaving medicine baskets from natural fibres

Direct booking link

All South Africa events

Sit in circle with weaver and artist Rene Bahloo and engage in deep contemplative, creative practice with natural fibres. You will be guided to weave a basketling which in turn will become a reflection of the weave of your self, your experience and your path of learning. Weaving is a practice which engages mind, body as well as spirit, and invites the wisdom of the weave to speak through your hands and hearts, in a safe and nurturing circle space.

Coil weave ceremony circle – Montagu

Direct booking link

All South Africa workshops

Basket weaving is a practice of the ancient ones. It is a process where fibres are harvested, prepared and transformed slowly into vessels of creation, through the alchemy of heart and mind, fibre and flow. In a weaving circle, a nurturing, sacred and safe space is created wherein the flow of the weave unfolds in tune with the wisdom of the universe, holding space for each individual weaver to take form, grow and bloom. Each woven piece is honoured for its individual beauty, and for its connection to the energy of the whole. No two pieces are the same, as is with each participant of the group.

Rene will take you on a journey into the flow of the weave – she will guide your learning of the techniques of basket weaving as well as gently direct the unfolding of the energetic weave of the group. This is a journey which includes storytelling (Rene is a ‘bit’ of a storyteller – of life, of growth and of her ongoing travels into the landscape people and culture of Indigenous Australia).

Come and join a special weaving circle with Rene Bahloo in Montague, before she returns to her home in Australia.

During this unique and informative knowledge exchange experience, you will learn how to create a coiled vessel using naturally dyed raffia fibre.

Much more than a technical skills exchange, this workshop is a ceremony, it  allows for the teachings of the weave to be seen and felt deeply. The voice of every participant is valued and  held in sacred space, honouring the wisdom inherent to each member of the group, and the group as a whole. This is a space for healing and learning, teaching, giving and receiving.  This is a space for the weaving of the fibres of life.

So, who is Rene?

Rene Bahloo is a weaver, teacher, installation artist and cultural exchange facilitator. She weaves with the fibre and flow of nature and life in order to manifest art, beauty community connection and joyful wellbeing. Rene Bahloo facilitates community gatherings to share the active meditation of basket weaving and to guide others to find their inner wisdom. She also initiates educational opportunities for sharing and reviving cultural weaving practises and facilitates intercultural connections, both in Australia and in her native country of South Africa. Rene’s passions stem from her experience of Australian Indigenous culture, leading to doctoral studies in creative arts, based on Indigenous culture, women’s business, living creatively and weaving journeys to wisdom. Her goal is for us all to weave our world into a better place, to weave ourselves in healing and wellbeing, to weave our environment with passion and purpose. She shares her knowledge through gatherings, circles and retreats in Australia and beyond, and is actively seeking partnerships in Southern Africa (her motherland) to share this important work in ever widening circles.

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When and where?

Montague TBA

Starts:
Wed 24 Apr 2019 at 11:00 AM (SAST)
Ends:
Wed 24 Apr 2019 at 5:00 PM (SAST)

Organiser details

Rene Bahloo

 +61438162552
 +61438162552

C is for cordyline australis

This cordyline has leaves that are amazingly strong – they can be easily split with a fingernail or needle and used as thread in a coil weave, or as a core fibre. The flatness of the leaves are conducive to flat weave experiments, but I can’t say I’ve tried that yet. Even though the fibre is strong enough to use when green, it’s best to dry the fibre -out of the elements – and then soak it overnight and wrap it in a damp towel before using. I love the linear strength of this fibre…
And yes it’s called cordyline Australis, but no, it’s not native to Australia. It’s from New Zealand. Figure that.