Indigenous cultural weaving weekend with traditional weavers from Arnhem Land

Two places have become available. Email me for details – weaverywork@gmail.com

 

This is a special opportunity to share a weekend of with traditional weavers from Arnhem Land as they journey to the Sunshine Coast in Australia. These special weavers travel once a year to Weavery HQ, where Rene Bahloo hosts them as part of her family, to share their culture, hearts, stories and traditional weaving practices with the wider community. They will share knowledge on fibre preparation, natural dyes and weaving techniques in this weekend. This is so much more than a weaving workshop for sharing and learning techniques, it is an opportunity for healing through the telling of stories, sharing song, learning language and culture from a remote community in the Indigenous Australian bush. It is a nurturing and safe space to ask questions, relax, have fun and immerse yourself in a new energy as you create your own basket with naturally dyed pandanus fibre straight from the homelands.

It is anticipated (preferred) that participants will attend for the whole weekend, though there are limited spaces for drop-in attendance of a single day.

Friday 2pm-5pm – pandanus fibre stripping and splitting and dyeing

Saturday 10.30am – 3.30pm – traditional weaving – (please bring your contribution to a shared lunch)

Sunday 10.30am – 3.30pm – traditional weaving continued – (please bring your contribution to a shared lunch)

All materials included.

$390 entire weekend.

Friday single – $150 one place available

Saturday single – $185 sold out

Sunday single – $185 one place available

Please email me to book, do not buy tickets over eventbrite platform

René – weaverywork@gmail.com

 

Brisbane Weavery healing workshop – basketry with natural fibres

Use prolific local fibres to explore possibilities in string making and connected weaving techniques (string nets and bags). Weave a dilly or sculptural piece. You will take home is so much more! than what you might expect – connection, calm, groundedness and new friends! Experience the healing, nurturing and centering forces that emerge as you weave with awareness, intention and mindfulness. Rene will facilitate a journey through the creative energy of the universe using plants that are all around you – you will never look at your natural environment in the same way again! Beginners welcome. Please bring a lunch dish to share with the group, for extra culinary connection.

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A is for Acacia Melanoxylon

Am I really starting this blog with acacia melanoxylon? It just popped into my head. Well more than that, really… I took some photos of it today at Fairhill native plant nursery. It’s commonly known as black wattle, or Australian blackwood, and is a very common pioneer plant. Grows like a weed (it’s actually on the global invasive species list)… And recently I read that the bark was traditionally used for making string and for fishing lines… So I’m starting my blog with a fibre I haven’t actually tested out yet, starting with an item of hearsay, as such. Going on printed information. Oh well, so be it. Acacia Melanoxylon. If I were to take an educated guess, I would suggest that the bark is best peeled off an immature shoot or sapling, as generally the young parts yield the best fibre for string and net-making. My next enquiry would be whether the inner bark could be separated from the outer, as can be done with the cotton tree bark, or not. The inner bark is often finer, less rough, and beautiful. But since I haven’t tested it yet, it’s just a guess.
Here’s a photo of it –

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Ok, it’s a terrible photo too, but just wait, I have some magnificent ones in the pipeline…!

A is also for Alexandra palm, Archontophoenix cunninghamii, Araucaria heterophyllis, Aristolochiacea and Anigozanthos, but not… yet.