Total Pageviews

Sunday 29 September 2013

Smocking Awesome Shit

Last Sunday in the month - went to the Treacle Market.  Bought a few essentials - a cthulhu cameo from Mr Shabby Cheek; two old photos from Madrid;



rather good, I think; and a child-sized smock, probably arts and crafts period.  I didn't have enough money to adopt "Old Dutchy" the robot unfortunately;


but maybe I will another Treacle Market day.

Then on to visit friends in the country, clear blue skies all the way.  All in all, a very successful day.

Saturday 28 September 2013

A Life in Badges

Here is a selection of badges from my random shit, I mean archives.  The stories those badges could tell...

Some Random Badges from the Archives

The Ned Kelly badge, for example could tell the tale of one night at UMIST when I lost it, and sang "Since you've been gone, BADGE, I'm out of my head, BADGE, can't take it, BADGE", until someone found it for me.

It is remarkable what people can achieve when I sing.  Miss Aimson learnt to talk before she was one.  Her first words were "Please Mummy stop singing to me".  Poor dyspraxic Master Aimson, on the other hand, couldn't speak until he was three, and had to suffer two more years of me singing to him.

Thursday 26 September 2013

Cat Shit

Just got back from the studio and my cat friend was in the garden at Aimo's House, on the shed roof.  I enticed her down to come and talk to me.  The conversation went something like this:

Me: I don't think friends shit in friends' gardens
Cat: I mostly just come round to shit.  I'm not that fussed about being friends, especially if you're going to be like that
Me: Okay then.

Here some of my latest linocuts from the studio:

Eagle and Child

Skull and Crossbones

Devil

Tudor Rose

Vampire Shit

Continuing my trawl through the "archives", as I like to call my random shit, I found this, a programme, yes a PROGRAMME, for a film showing I went to at The Tyneside Cinema:

Film Programme

It may be typed individually, or possibly reproduced in some way, I'm not sure.  I'm not sure what the date was, probably 1981 or 1982.  It shows the vast difference in media availability between then and now.  Then I had to travel 26 miles by train to go to the Tyneside Cinema for the one showing to see Nosferatu and the Cabinet of Dr Caligari, now I own the DVDs which are available any time on a well-known internet shopping site.  You've already seen Dr Caligari on the "Zombies and Gravestones" post.  Here is Nosferatu:

Nosferatu
At Aimo's House, the younger members of the family watch films and media in various different ways which are as yet a mystery to me,  but me and Aimo prefer to own DVDs, CDs, and books in solid form on our shelves where we can see them in real life.
The film programme was in this book which my brother gave me for a birthday present:

A Strange book about Vampires.
 
I was flicking through it yesterday, and it mentioned some films which I knew were in Aimo's vampire DVD collection, so I watched them last night:

One of Aimo's Vampire DVDs

Another one of Aimo's Vampire DVDs
No travelling by train to watch them.  In fact I went to bed early and watched them on a laptop.  The wonders of not very modern technology (the sound is a bit dodgy on the old laptop)!


Wednesday 25 September 2013

More Random Shit

I've some more random shit from my "archives" for your delectation today.  This relates to The Old Village Witch post.  It is the letter I received from the grandma of my friend, telling me what she knew about the cottage we used to live in in Chapel.

The Letter

This is the page of the letter about the witch.

This is an illustration of that area of town, known as Town End:

The Diagram
Our house was in Old School Yard, which is down what is marked as "lane".

Tuesday 24 September 2013

I am the Queen of Random Shit

When we driving around Norwich on Sunday (we weren't lost, we'd been given very poor directions) I spotted Cokayne Road.  It's good to know that The Land of Cockayne exists, and it's in Norwich!

I have been looking at the history of Gothic chapbooks because I am making some contemporary chapbooks.  (Like I need an excuse to look at Gothic chapbooks).  I have been reading about them in Terror! A History of Horror Illustrations from the Pulp Magazines by Peter Haining.


Terror!
 Inside the book I found some pages from old Radio Times magazines. 

The Radio Times
I like the sub-heading "Mangled corpses and bottles of pickled entrails".   Such headings are the stuff of Fleams.

You may ask how much random shit do you have hoarded away at Aimo's House?  The answer being I AM the Queen of Random Shit, and I have lots.

Monday 23 September 2013

I have no Idea ...

Well now, that's Miss Aimson safely delivered to The University of East Anglia.  It's time for me to STEP AWAY FROM THE CHOCOLATE and get on with things.
It was a four-hour drive there and back again, so there was lots of time to think.  Also it involved going through the Fens, my childhood haunts, so there was a lot to think about.
Leaving Miss Aimson there, so far from home and her boyfriend, but doing what she really wants to do (very brave) I have decided that knowing what you are doing is not a very good qualification for being a parent.  I have never had a clue what I was doing, and always thought it was a problem.  But as Miss Aimson seems to be setting off into her future in a goodly manner, obviously knowing what are doing as a parent doesn't count for anything. 
I have a sign in the kitchen at Aimo's House which reads "I smile because I have absolutely no idea what's going on", and in a way that's living by the Anglo-Saxon Theory of Courage, which is an important part of JRR Tolkien's work, or the hymns of The Diggers and The Ranters.  In life in general we can have no idea what it's all about, so we might as well have a glass of wine and some more chocolate.  Oh no, hang on, that's where I started.  Nice to know I was doing the right thing after all.
Toodles!

Tolkien with no Alan Lee

Friday 20 September 2013

Cleppy Bells

I think it's time now to continue with the tale of The Cleppy Bells (see comments on post "Clipping the church") .  Hopefully it won't be too much of a disappointment after the build-up.  It all started when we were visiting Dumfries and Galloway, and staying in Knock.  We visited Wigtown (Town of Books!) and went to have a look at the church.  There a very enthusiastic American lady told me the story of the Wigtown Martyrs. 

It has to do with The Killing Times and The Covenanters, which I couldn't pretend to explain to you.  It goes something like: James II of England, VII of Scotland was a Catholic; the Scottish church was Presbyterian; The Covenant was made in 1638, which was for Presbyterianism and against royal control of the Church.  When The Killing Times started, the authorities (for royal control of everything) prosecuted Covenanters and tried to force them to swear The Abjuration Oath, renouncing The Covenant.

In Wigtown, the two women, Margaret Wilson and Margaret McLachlan were imprisoned and required to swear the Abjuration Oath, and swear loyalty to the King.  They refused, were found guilty and sentenced to be killed by the tide (honest guv, it was the tide wot dun it, nuffing to do with me), that is to say they were chained up to stakes in the tidal channel of the River Bladnoch near to the entrance to Wigtown Bay, there to be drowned when the tide came in, and not executed by a person.

There was, understandably strong feelings on both sides about this happening in the town.  The two opposing sides were divided by religious, sovereignty and nationalist issues.  Someone, from a Bell family, on one side of the division, mocked the death of the women, talking about the women hung there with their hands "clept" around the stake.  This family of Bells became very unpopular, and were thought to be cursed with webbed fingers in retribution for their cruel laughter.  They were forever afterwards known as "The Cleppy Bells" and talked about in the way that you only can be in a small community.  Other Bell families made sure they were not associated with The Cleppy Bells.

So the story continued to the present day, a memorial day to The Wigtown Martyrs was planned, and ex-pat families from all around the world were returning to Wigtown.  The MP Martin Bell was invited, and he asked for some geneaological work to be done - which family of Bells was he descended from?  The answer - The Cleppy Bells.  Which only goes to show - some questions are best not asked.

Thursday 19 September 2013

The Last White Dragon

Continuing the old writing project, I am posting the last White Dragon article that I'm including in the blog.

The Last White Dragon

It was, I think the crowning achievement of my White Dragon years, and the article I am most proud of.  It is also the only article I did illustrations for:

My first illustration

My second illustration
Well, you don't have to be impressed by them, I was really proud of them.  On to the article:

The Tools of the Trade
by Kate Aimson
February 2000

Witches practice a craft and revere their tools (no, seriously, I need to be able to say tools without you sniggering).  The tools we associate with witches are all ancient domestic objects.  They have the oldest associations with human life, therefore have many customs and superstitions attached to them.  Stories about witches detail their brooms, cauldrons, sickles, crystal balls, spinning wheels, even ovens.  These are mentioned in passing in the stories, because they merely illustrate how witches used ordinary objects to weave their spells.  it was the use they made of their tools that counted.

Domestic Tools
Spinning wheels appear in the stories of Sleeping Beauty and Rumpelstiltskin.  The art of spinning has always been a big part of domestic life.  Until about 1550 all thread was spun with a distaff and spindle.  The distaff is a cleft stick, which holds the carded wool or plant fibres.  The spindle is a straight stick weighted with a detachable whorl at the bottom.  The spinner (or spinster?) pulls the fibres out with one hand, and twisting them between finger and thumb and winding the thread made onto the spindle.  The spinning wheel, which was operated by a foot treadle, leaving both hands free to work the thread, appeared around 1550 in wealthy households.  (There are versions of spinning wheels without the treadle, where the big wheel is spun by hand.)  Of course, there was a crossover period as more and more people got spinning wheels, instead of spindles.
Archaeologists find spindle whorls buried in graves.  Genealogists refer to the 'distaff' side of the family, meaning the female side, and the term 'spinster' is still the legal term for an unmarried woman.  The tools of the spinner are deeply embedded in our language and folklore.
After the Black Death, life became more prosperous for ordinary people.  Two of the most important new additions to a good farm were a dairy and an oven.  These additions to the most basic life became part of myth and superstition.  Stories which relate the involvement of fairies in the dairy, e.g. trying to stop the butter-making, go back to this age.  The witch is often seen with her oven, e.g. trying to cook Hansel and Gretel, another indication of a very old story.
It seems to me in later stories people put in old tools, giving them an importance, in some way without knowing why.  It was like they knew it was old stuff, and old stuff was pretty much the same as magic stuff.  In this way, some objects have become imbued with magical significance, when there was not originally magic being done.  For example, for some reason witches being measured, or measuring, with a witch's girdle (a simple length of cord) is magic.  Actually the measuring of fabric was often done with a cord or stick, marked to an ell, a natural measurement relating to an arm's length, in older times.  When re-telling stories the old stuff bits were put it because they just were, because it was old; and then the old-ness became magical.  People knew it was important, but they didn't know why.  Old was important and magical in itself.
But I digress, back to the ovens.  In occult terms salamanders are fire elementals.  However, there is also a domestic implement called a salamander.  These were made in metal, often shaped like the lizard itself.  They were heated in the kitchen fire, which was always burning, then carried into another room, where a fire was laid and ready to be lit.  This is described in Alison Uttley's The Country Child:
"On Christmas Eve fires blazed in the kitchen and parlour, even in the bedrooms.  Becky ran from room to room with the red hot salamander which she stuck between the bars to make a blaze."  What a tool that would be for a witch!

The Means of Production
Another tool for a witch as social outcast and rebel would be the quern.  Quern-stones were shaped stones to grind grain to flour by simple but strenuous handwork.  In Mediaeval times, querns were made illegal.  Why?  So that no-one could make their own flour, but had to take it to the mill and then pay a mill tax.  This was paid by coin, or in kind, with a cut of the flour.  To have this simple tool was literally "ownership of the means of production", not the sort of encouraged by the ruling class.  Here we can see the importance of the ownership of a tool to a person's life.  to own a tool was essential to a craft.  Ownership of the correct tools was almost synonymous with a craft.  So ownership of a broomstick, cauldron, crystal ball, pointy hat, black cat, etc. very nearly made you a witch by themselves.

Tools' Magical Links to Their Owners
Superstition illustrates the magical link between owner and tool.  When a Northumbrian reaper cut his hand on a sickle, the tool was cleaned and polished to help mend the wound.  Similarly, if an injury was caused by a rusty nail, it was taken to the blacksmith's for the rust to be removed.  It was then carefully polished every day before sunrise and after sunset until the wound was healed.  The link between the man and the tool was strong enough for contagious magic to be worked.
Craftsmen and their tools are also described in The Country Child.  The annual arrival of the Irish men to do the mowing is described.  The barn is prepared fro them to live in and:
"Tom and Dan fetched all the rakes and two-pronged forks from the corner where they had been stacked for the winter... The long scythes were lifted down the barn walls, and honed until they gleamed...New teeth were made and fitted in the wooden rakes."
But when the Irishmen arrived:
"The most important of the men were Patrick and Corney and Andy, the mowers. ...They tied their corduroy trousers with twisted grass below the knee, ... and at the backs of their leather belts they carried sockets holding their whetstones.  they brought their own scythes wrapped in sacking on their backs."
The mowers were craftsmen, not labourers and therefore owned and carried their own tools.

The link between the life of a person and their tools of the trade is seen everywhere.  I have not deciphered what is behind this story from Derbyshire; is it perhaps an example of what I was talking about when I said old stuff becomes magic stuff?  Ann Brightmore married at Wormhill church.  She was working at Wormhill Hall, and when it was time for the ceremony she went to the church with her broom still in her hand.  The groom had been mending the roof, and came down to be married with the trowel still in his hand.  Why did they think it was necessary to be married with the tools of their respective trades in their hands?  The punchline to the story was that they were always as devoted to each other as they were to their work.
At hiring fairs, where servants were contracted for a year of employment, people stood, in living memory, with a symbolic tool to advertise their willingness to work in that trade.  These fairs were also known as "mop fairs" because of this.  Another old story illustrated this relationship between a servant and their tool.  A farmer's wife in North Derbyshire wanted to take on a servant, and had the choice of several girls.  Each was coming at a different time for an interview.  Her manservant suggested a test: a besom was laid across the front path, and they watched from the window.  The first girl kicked the broom aside.  They said "She's an idle slut, and can't bend her back".  The second girl simply jumped over the broom.  "She won't do, she'll skip her work", was the verdict.  The third picked up the besom and put it away.  She was given the job as she had shown herself to be careful, industrious, and tidy.

The Making of an Object in its Entirety

An example of a tool handmade to the purpose and very closely linked to the personality of the user is the knitting sheath.  Early knitting needles were made without knobs on the ends (I told you at the beginning not to snigger), and a special tool, the knitting sheath, was made to support one needle in the work.  It was tucked under the arm or hooked on to the waistband of a skirt or apron to enable the knitter to work more quickly and easily.  Many people augmented their incomes by knitting while they minded sheep or travelled by horse and cart.  The sheaths were usually made of wood, have a hole in the top to take one end of the needle.  There is a wide variety of shapes, mostly characteristic of a particular area.  Many were made by a sweetheart as a love token, like the love spoons of Wales.  If you want to see some of these wonderfully personal tools, the Dales Countryside Museum in Hawes houses the Agar Collection of Knitting Sheaths.  If you could handle one, what an interesting exercise in psychometry it would be.  The lives of the sweetheart making the sheath and the loved one knitting while she tended the sheep are totally entwined in this one object.
The link to the owner is also seen in the bobbins used to make pillow lace.  In early times, this was called bone lace, because bone bobbins were used.  Pillow lace production was centred in the South West and The East Midlands. 
A striking difference between the two areas is that in the South West, the bobbins are all mass-produced to a uniform design, whereas in the East Midlands there are infinite varieties of bobbins.  One lacemaker would rarely own two bobbins alike.  Why this difference developed between the two traditions I do not know, but in the East Midlands the tools of the trade were an expression of the personality of the owner.  Bobbins were made by specialist manufacturers or general woodturners.  In the East Midlands each bobbin would be manufactured individually and often be highly decorated.  they would also be customised by the owner.  Lacemakers would sometimes put their own charms or mementos on the end instead of the ordinary "spangle" of beads: boot buttons, army buttons, shells, coins, in fact anything with a hole in it.  Inscriptions were burnt in or added with pins or thorns.  Messages might be "Kiss me quick" or "Forget me not", or even "I wants a husband".  Again they be handcarved by a sweetheart as a love token.  These tools illustrate the typical ways in which people made their possessions personal to them in folk art.

The Fewer Your Possessions, the Greater Their Value

Lacemakers also used a tool made famous by witches.  The crystal ball is now only used for magical purposes, but was once a household tool.  Lacemakers  used to maximise the light available from a candle by putting it on a 'candle block' or 'flash stool'.  An adjustable candlestick was fixed in the middle of a high-legged stool, and around it were placed up to six wooden sockets that held long-necked globes of water, the 'flashes' or flasks.  These would concentrate the beams of light on the work.  Objects like this were in widespread use to enable people to work in the darker hours.  In a richer household they might be crystal balls.  So the most mystical tool of the witch is again only a domestic tool used in a magical way - for scrying.  Candles were also placed in front of mirrors to increase the light available for work.  There is something very magical about working a spell in a mirror by candlelight, and many traditions use this.  Mirrors were a domestic tool, for lighting purposes, before they were magic mirrors.  The household books of Naworth Castle, near Carlisle, detail housekeeping between 1618-1633.  There is included an item: nine shillings for 'a little looking glass' to be used to double the light of a candle.  The books list needlework tools, payments for spinning and weaving, and buying items like pins from pedlars.
By the seventeenth century pedlars covered all the country and carried household items and, more specifically, threads, tools, dyes, needles and pins.  Most people would only have the chance to buy such items from a pedlar (also known as a packman, jaggerman, or chapman, depending on the area covered and goods carried) or at fairs.  Anything that was needed between these times of opportunity must be made.  In early times everything was home-made and people could return to these methods if necessary.  Thorns were used as pins, fish bones and carved bone for needles.  Scissors were shears or 'snips' of iron, made by the blacksmith.  there are references to needlework tools from Roman times, but they increase greatly through the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, as they were increasingly manufactured as a product, rather than made at home by an individual.
The very few possessions that a person owned increased their importance by their scarcity.  Inventories of an entire household could be written on a single sheet of parchment.  A published example of this is the inventory of a blacksmith's household in 1643.  The personal importance of a handmade tool, and the objects made with it, is something we should strive for in witchcraft. 

Tools are Also Made

One way we could try this out is to make a pincushion for personal use.  I think a pinchushion containing pins for use in magic deserves to be ranked with the besom, cauldron, pointy hat and crystal ball as an essential tool of the trade for a witch.  Pins were such an essential household item that they completely saturate folklore, superstition and custom.
Pins were used for sewing, as fastenings for dress and household items.  Originally they were manufactured in brass or copper alloy.  In his 'Description of England' (1587), William Harrison noted that pin-making had begun in England in the 1570s, and that the English pin-makers 'excel all nations'.  Pins were made by sharpening a straight piece of wire and winding a thinner gauge wire around the other end, which was hammered on to make the head.  Not until 1824 was a soli pin invented.
Pins were also handmade and customised in various ways.  Burrs were plucked from goosegrass, the outer skin scraped off, and stuck on the wire,  As they dried, they would contract and forma brown pinhead.  These were called burrheads or sweethearts.  we cannot even contemplate making such trivial tools as pins these days, but imagine the people who did.  then imagine the power of a magical working, where even the pin used is s handmade tool, made specifically for that occasion, and totally imbued with your spirit.

Pins and Magic

Pins were used in every way by witches.  the Museum of Witchcraft in Boscastle has cases and cases of items where the spell was cast by sticking with pins.  Here are two examples of spells by the wiseman William Dawson, who practised in County Durham in the early nineteenth century. 
A wealthy man asked why he was losing so many of his stock.  having ascertained witchcraft as the cause, Dawson told the farmer to remove the heart of one of the dead beasts and pierce it with nine new nails, nine new pins and nine needles.  The heart was then to be ritually burned. 
A young man was thought to be bewitched.  So "clippings from every finger and toe nail of the patient, with hair from each temple, and the crown of his head, were stuffed into the throat of a pigeon which had previously been placed between the patient's feet, and there had died at once, thus attesting the witchery from which he was suffering.  the bird's bill was riveted with three pins and then the wiseman thrust a pin into its breast, to reach the heart, everybody else in the room following his example".
Another way a witch used a pin is illustrated here in a story from Derbyshire.  A young girl was engaged to a man with light hair.  the girl met a witch who told her she must marry a dark haired man.  The witch gave the girl a triangular shaped piece of paper, which she pricked three times (I think gave means sold).  The girl was to wear the paper next to her bosom and three weeks later the paper would have the name of her dark-haired husband-to-be.

Pins were used in folk custom.  In Derbyshire they were dropped into wells.  Some wells were known as pin-wells.  for example in Bradwell on Easter Sunday the children used to drop pins in the five wells of the village.  They said that a fairy lived at each well and knew whether a child had dropped a pin or not.  On Easter Monday the children would walk around all day with bottles of sweetened and/or flavoured water.  the bottles of the children who had dropped pins into the wells remained intact, whereas the bottles of the children who had not broke.  Dropping pins in wells must be ancient and widespread, as the Roman Coventina's Well on Hadrian's Wall contained many pins when it was excavated.
Pins were so associated with domestic life that a married woman's money, which she could spend herself, with no reference to her husband, was called pin money.

There are two examples from The East Midlands of people with strange manias for pins.  Pin Tommy walked the streets of Derby in the 1830s.  Every pin he found or was given was added to his clothing until it was like a suit of armour.  It was said that he would rather go hungry than swop one of his pins for food.  Perhaps he was obsessed with the proverb:

"See a pin and pick it up, all day long you'll have good luck; see a pin and let it lie, all day long your luck will die."

Kitty Hudson (also called the human pincushion) was born in Arnold, near Nottingham, in 1765.  She developed a habit of swallowing pins, and in fact could not get to sleep without pins in her mouth.  she was finally admitted to hospital and over a long period of time pins, needles, and pieces of bone were removed from all over her body.  On being discharged she married, had nineteen children who all died, was widowed, remarried and eventually settled in South Wingfield, Derbsyhire.  For the rest of her life, pins would occasionally erupt from her skin.

In the nineteenth century rectangular-shaped pincushions were made for an event like a homecoming, a birth, or a marriage, with a message or wish spelt out it pins.  Again, they were made as love tokens, especially by sailors and soldiers for their sweethearts at home.

Know Your Tools and How to Use Them

Other tools you may wish to have are needles, scissors, thimbles, r a chatelaine.  Use them with a knowledge of their history.  Needles could be home-made as we have seen, but they were imported in the sixteenth century.  The Germans, and especially the Spanish, were highly skilled in steelworking.  These gradually replaced needles made from iron wire, made in England, which easily bent ad broke.  By Mary Tudor's time high-quality needles were being made and sold in London in a shop owned by a Spanish Moor.  Steel needles were eventually produced industrially in England, and you may wish to visit The Forge Mill Needle Museum in Redditch.  There is not as much superstition attached to needles as pins, but factory seamstresses used to say that they would never lend each other needles as it would 'prick' their friendship.
Scissors were available in this country from around 1550-1600, again being made by Spanish Moors in Toledo and Cordoba.  Only these steel scissors were sharp and delicate enough for detailed sewing work.  Superstitions attached to scissors are that if someone gives you a present of scissors, you must give them a coin, or 'cut' the friendship.  Professional seamstresses used to say that they would never pick up scissors they had dropped themselves, but that they must let someone else do it.
They also considered it very unlucky to lose a thimble, perhaps because being so closely fitted to one finger, and always worn on that finger, it contained something of the essence of the owner.  The link between owner and tool was close enough fro contagious magic, as we have seen.  Thimbles have a very long history and were made as a result of the need to protect the finger when pushing unpolished needles through coarse cloth.  Tailors and sail-makers have their own specialised forms of thimble.  Maybe some older readers remember and old party game 'hunt the thimble'.
Chatelaines developed in mediaeval times from the necessity of the lady of the castle (the chatelaine) to carry all her keys on her person, attached to her belt.  An eighteenth century or nineteenth century chatelaine had a number of chains suspended from a central clip, with a different item hanging at the end of each e.g. a thimble in a case (maybe acorn-shaped), scissors, penknife, pincushion, needlecase, pencil and pad.  These became decorative objects, almost a piece of jewellery.

I will finish this version of the article with a great quotation.
Children were taught how to use and care for tools.  They were also shown how they did their job, and the correct way to use them.  In Needlework for Student Teachers (c.1923), it was explained how to teach this:

"Teachers cannot be too particular in enforcing the proper use of thimble and needle.  No child will ever become a skilful worker until it has a complete mastery over its tools; and to teach the correct position of needle, thread and thimble at the right time, viz., before material is used (i.e. work is started) must be the aim of every teacher.  By neglecting this step progress is retarded ... and good results are next to impossible" and again "Children must not be allowed to do as they please in the matter of holding their implements with the hope that eventually the best way will suggest itself to the child's mind."

You will be pleased to know that since the publication of this article, I have learned to use a thimble, and now always do.  Eventually the right way of doing things just became the only way to do things.

Wednesday 18 September 2013

Magical Garments

Following the theme of posting old articles here is the last article I had published in White Dragon.  It is more heavily edited than the last post, as I am assuming you don't what to know actual instructions for making Seminole patchwork.  The actual title of the article was Patchwork, Indians and Magical Garments, but I am just sticking to the garments bit.

August 2000

Magical Garments
by Kate Aimson
(An edited version of an article from August 2000)

This is one story of the preparation for ritual.  I am using the Seminole Indians of Florida, USA, as my example.  This is the story of a living tradition, a tradition that moves with the times, using the new circumstances and tools available, whilst keeping true an important concept or traditional way of doing things.  The Seminole Indians had always created new costumes fro seasonal rituals, but as their location, and the times, changed, they used modern techniques.

Ritual Dress
Nowadays, modern writers usually recommend ritual dress, and sometimes writers and pagans go so far as to recommend people should make their own ritual dress.  However, I have never read pagan writers saying that people should make their own ritual dress each time for major festivals or rituals.  The preparation, as a community, for a festival, is an important part of the ritual.
In our own memories, we can remember such tradition.  My Grandma remembered how in East Anglia when they were children, they always had to wear new clothes on May Day.  In some parts of the country it was Easter Sunday fro them.  My mother-in-law from Manchester remembered having new clothes for the Wakes Week walks.  Her mother was a dressmaker, and made new outfits for my mother-in-law and her sister to wear on the Walks.  One year, one day after the dresses were finished, she had gone to work and the girls played at shop by displaying the outfits from the house window.  When she returned, and saw that everyone had seen the outfits, she then had to stay up all night sewing new outfits for the girls to wear on the walk, as they were no longer new.  When I was a child (not that long ago, really) we had Easter Bonnet Parades at school, although they were more like fancy dress than real, new clothes.  One of the few dress traditions that still touches us all is wedding clothes, where some old traditions like "Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue" are still very much alive.  It is the act of making the outfits ourselves, or having them made to our designs and choice, rather than selecting from what the consumer world has designed for us, that is important.
The Lakota artist and scholar Arthur Amiotte observes that, in his culture, people have a phrase for fine ceremonial dress - saiciye - meaning, "being adorned in proper relationship to the gods".  similar aesthetic principles were widely shared across Native North America.  Because of the way in which European Art has developed over the past few centuries we tend to forget the importance that the body can have as a canvas for art.  In Native American traditions, however, dress, including body decoration and clothing has been one of the most important vehicles for artistic expression - a tradition which is carried through into contemporary pow-wow dress.

Women's Work - The Sacredness of Making
Beautifying the work by vowing to undertake an artistic project was an act of honour and devotion.  As in many Amerindian traditions, the finished object was in some ways less important that the process of undertaking it in a ritually prescribed manner.  On the Great Plains, a woman's path to dignity, honour, and long life lay the correct and skilled pursuit of the arts.  In European folklore we have women either making their wedding clothes, or a gift of clothing, especially a shirt, for their sweetheart.  This is remembered in the song "Scarborough Fair".  The woman is instructed to carry out an impossible ritual task if she wishes to marry the man...  (I like the versions of the song in which the woman replies with some equally impossible tasks the man can carry out if he wishes to marry her).  In the Hans Christian Andersen fairy tale "The Wild Swans" or "The Eleven Swans" the European heroine, Elise, takes up a task to release her brothers from a spell.  Their wicked step-mother had turned them into swans, and a mysterious woman gives Elise her ritual instructions: "Do you see these sting nettles which I have in my hand?  There are many around the cave where you are sleeping and only those that grow there, or on the graves of the churchyard are of use.  Remember that!  You must pluck them, and with this yarn you must weave eleven shirts with long sleeves.  When they are all made, throw them over the eleven wild swans and the spell will be broke.  But take heed.  From the moment you begin the work you must not speak a word, even if it occupies you for many years.  The first syllable that escapes your lips will fall like a dagger into the hearts of your brothers.  Their lives depend on your tongue."  With this, she fell to her knees, thanked God and went to begin her work.  Though the nettle blistered her hands, and her feet as she trampled the yarn, she continued.  Frightening trials to her vow of silence are ignored as she makes the shirts, and on the point of being burnt as a witch, she saves her brothers and they rescue her.
The knowledge of the important process, over time, and following magical ways of means, as well as ends, is in our folklore too.  I think we would be greatly adding to the richness of women's spiritual lives if we recovered this lost ritual.  The making of a ritual garment is an ancient women's mystery, and the memory of this magic is still alive, if you can see the signs of it in our present life.
The Seminole still prepare to celebrate the Green Corn Dance in this way.  It is held annually, and all the Seminole clans gather together to celebrate for four or five days.  This marks the beginning of a new year.  For these events, the women still produce their best work, traditional costumes for their families to wear.
No-one has catalogued all the patterns worked.  As in all traditions of patchwork, the women exchange ideas and copy new patters, so no design is exclusive to any one person.  Sometimes an individual's work can be recognised simply by the frequency with which a favourite pattern occurs in her work.  It has been suggested that years ago the lower band on a woman's skirt indicated her clan, but it is not difficult to see how this association of a pattern with a particular person or family group might have come about.  The women who sewed for their families would have made up pattern bands of great length, which would have been used several times for a new garment until the length was finished.  This probably gave the impression that a particular pattern was exclusive to one family, without that necessarily being true.

Regional Distinctiveness
 Decorative patterns and styles have always been regional in this way, also they have been dictated by the materials available at particular locations.  At great gatherings at festivals, it would have been possible to see where someone or some group was from, and whom they belonged to, by these styles.

I went on to suggest the desirability of this, linking people to their land.

Tuesday 17 September 2013

The Old Village Witch

I thought I'd post a copy of the first thing I ever had published, an article published by White Dragon magazine in 1996.  I have come across it on tinternet in various places, including the Malayasian Pagan Forum, and I thought I might as well have it on my blog.  So here goes:

White Dragon magazine

The Old Village Witch
by Kate Aimson (it was first published in the magazine spelling my name Amison, so if you have seen it under that name, it was me)

One summer I was walking with a neighbour along a lane after a long afternoon's walk.  We passed a flower which I did not recognise, and as I was looking at it she said: "those women that they used to call witches, all that it was was that they knew the herbal cures for things, using the plants around them."

This sentiment is often heard, often as an apology for witches, or some sort of guilt thing for all the old ladies executed for witchcraft.  Fine, so we have solved the mystery, cleared up the silly old folk tale of the witch and we can feel only contempt for the patriarchal formal authorities who persecuted these women for practising a bit of home-grown, natural medicine on their neighbours.

But the thought occurs to me: "So they knew all the medicinal uses of plants - HOW? "  We are talking about people who did not generally have books, with no mass communication, no nationally accepted names for plants, no agreed scientific classification of flora (or none that a village woman would be aware of).  May be we actually are talking about witchcraft after all.

That same year the same neighbour came to tell me that her grandma had told her that when she was small she ran errands for an old lady, and that old lady had told her that when she was small a witch lived in my house.  She remembered two things about her: that they were frightened of her, even though she was known to be good; and that she used to be seen gathering herbs and plants, perhaps along those lanes and woods where I walk.

Thinking about this lady, living in her small stone cottage, I have some ideas about the old witches and their herbal lore.  If there was no scientific recognition of plants, or even reference books, some other factors must have been involved in the witch's knowledge of healing herbs.  I suggest a threesome of factors involved: GUIDELINES, INTUITION and KNOWLEDGE.

With these three, a witch could solve a problem or help someone with a particular complaint at a particular time.
KNOWLEDGE: this is the knowledge of plants, their names; which are poisonous, which specific and accepted properties; and tried and tested usage of plants and methods.  If the witch did not have a book to make notes in, this knowledge would be stored in the memory.
GUIDELINES: a witch's long experience tells in what kind of ways certain types of things were used.  She would know to use a certain plant, but if it was not available guidelines would allow her to substitute one of a similar effect.  Guidelines could be such things as the colour of plants and flowers; where they live; what kind of leaves they have; what family of plants they belong to.  Guidelines would say which part to use in what way for what ailment.  These guidelines would be accumulated with experience and experimenting through force of necessity.
INTUITION: call it what you will, this is the interesting part.  this is magical knowledge, direct communication with plants, intuition, meditation, inner guidance.  WITCHCRAFT.  A complete separate kind of knowledge from experience, this knowledge comes from an external source.  Here lies the religious or spiritual experience of the witch.  Here she keeps in touch with the universal and seasonal round.  Here rituals are necessary to keep in touch, and to pay her dues.  Without giving she will not receive.  Without being in touch she will not have access to inspiration and guidance.

Over the course of her long life, the witch would have developed these in the following ways:
KNOWLEDGE: perhaps with mother or aunt showing and telling the names.  Someone else can tell you the names, but you need to go and look at them and learn them.  This knowledge can be written down as an aid to memory.  Writing it down will merely help you to remember.  Knowledge grows in the memory, and written notes help and are there to prompt you.
GUIDELINES: these come from experience.  There might be generally accepted guidelines which you might have been taught.  If a witch had a book, she could make a note of what she has tried and how it worked out.  This would gradually build up a spell-book which could be referred to.  Without a book, it would be memory work.  As aids to memory, traditions, customs, rhymes and chants come into their own.
INTUTION/MAGIC: this comes from experience of, and closeness to, the Goddess and the story of the year.  Also from meditation, thought and worship, in whatever form they would have taken for a village witch.  I would suggest that she must have practised ritual of some kind because if she wasn't involved in ritual she wouldn't be practised enough in the contact between herself and the natural and spiritual world.  A witch would need to build up a relationship with plants to have a direct communication with them.  This intuition is not the same as knowledge or guidelines, although they help to make educated guesses possible, and also to understand the terms in which the answers are phrased.  This fact deals with knowledge of the essence of things, and the altering of things within their essence.  This is the place where decisions and changes are made.  This is where spells are cast.  This is MAGIC.

So I would suggest that for these old women to have had access to knowledge of plants and their healing properties, they must have had spiritual communication with the essences of the plants.  To do this, they must have been practising, perhaps unconsciously, the things that we try to follow today to be witches.  I would suggest that the old village witch was a witch rather than a nice old lady who was quite good at making herbal cough mixtures for her neighbours!

I have entered it as it was published in 1996.

Monday 16 September 2013

The Land of Cockayne

In Early Modern England, the fantasy land where life was always easy was known as The Land of Cockayne.  The people then fantasised about a world where there was no work, where food was always available, where there were no lords and masters.  Classical Celtic culture had Tir Nan Og, and other cultures their Blessed Isles and Summerlands, their Big Rock Candy Mountains.

I have been thinking what would be in The Land of Cockayne for us?  A land where boilers never break down; a land where there are never power-cuts, a land where washing machines and cars never break down; a land where no computers ever mess up your direct debits or bills; a land where such bills are always easily affordable; a land where living is easy.

Are these fantasies as unlikely as tables with never-ending feasts and fountains that give wine, like our ancestors thought of?  I suppose they are.  Does it do us good to fantasise about them?  Maybe, from time to time, it is relaxing for us think that there is such a land of Cockayne, where the living is easy.

Back to Monday morning, the rain and the bank statement.  Oh dear.

Sunday 15 September 2013

Commas, Books

The Advertiser this week featured a photo of a comma butterfly taken at The Goyt.  I'm jealous now, we haven't seen one in the garden at Aimo's House.

Comma Butterfly in the Advertiser

Yesterday me and Aimo had a ride out to Castleton as the afternoon was so pretty.  We peeped in the "funny" shop and there - a desk for £25 - I was looking for a desk to do my lino-cutting!  So that was the reason behind our random trip to Castleton - it was some kind of premonition, the perfect desk for my needs was waiting for me.  (I'm such a hippy, as some of my colleagues would say, like it was a bad thing!)

Now, as they say, today is the first day of the rest of my life.  I've been in my studio at home today, and cleared out a car-load of stuff.  Now it's set up for me to write about Fleams, and illustrate the books.  It's time for The Lost Book of Fleams to be found!  Here is the first draft of one of the booklets that forms part of The Lost Book:

First draft chapbook

This is just the text, I will be designing the illustration now I have the perfect desk.  Wish me luck!

Saturday 14 September 2013

Clipping the Church

Cheryl did go to the Clipping the Church ceremony, although Maia didn't hold the candle.  Someone at the church had told Cheryl it was an ancient ceremony, pagan in origin.  "I think you'll find that is bollocks" I was too polite to say.  I did say "Oh, they do that at Burbage (Christ Church, Burbage is about halfway between Cheryl's house and mine), "but that ceremony can't be that old as the church was built in 1851." 
When I got home I looked it up in Crichton Porteous:

A Small Booklet

Well, well.  He has two entries for Clipping the Church.  this is Wirksworth's:

"It is spoken of as a revival out of the far past.  The revival was made by Provost Ham in 1921, but the most I have been able to learn about the previous keeping of the custom is that the sequence "may have been broken for 100 years" before 1921.  Also I have failed to find any mention of The Clipping in old books, but that does not imply that Provost Ham had not found references." Very diplomatic, Mr Porteous.

This is the entry for Burbage:

"The custom probably began when the church was dedicated in 1851, though nobody is quite sure.  Certainly it may not have been started until a year or so later, but the oldest inhabitant I could find - born in Burbage in 1873 - had The Clypping among earliest childhood memories."

So Wirkworth's ceremony is as ancient as 1921.  Even if Burbage only dates back to 1875, it's got them beat by nearly 50 years.  I have a very healthy scepticism for what I'm told in Wirksworth Church.  Once someone told me with pride their church was ancient, dating to the 16th century.  My lip curling, I said in my best being-snotty-to-Southerners voice "Really, I'm from Northumberland and we wouldn't call anything later than 7th century a really old church."  It's fun being rude sometimes.

As for "clipping", which even Crichton Porteous was puzzled about, it's only an old-timey word for hugging, of the same vintage as "bussing" for kissing.  Mary Webb uses clipping as an ordinary word, as it should be used.  Alison Uttley uses bussing.

I suppose the word clipping is related to "clapped", "clasped" or "clept"; being of the same kind of meaning.  "Clept" brings me to a real rip-snorter of a story which was told to me in a church in Wigton, Dumfries and Galloway by a very enthusiastic American lady.  Aimo was trying to sidle out of the door, but I was quite interested in the story of the "Cleppy Bells" ... but I suppose that's a tale for another day.  I suppose this blog's a bit like Jackanory, but with swearing, sarcasm and hedgehog poo.

Friday 13 September 2013

Goblins not Fairies

I have been reading this rather large book:

A Very Large Book

I think exhaustive is the adjective used for this kind of biography, which covers everything, absolutely everything, there is to be known about the subject.

I did find a very interesting little gem in it.  One of Christina Rossetti's well-known works is Goblin Market.  She was insistent that it must never be referred to as having a fairy subject matter,
and that the word fairy must never be used in conjunction with the book.  One of the things she had against fairy imagery was that in Victorian times it was an excuse for depicting naked children.  Here is the relevant passage from the Jan Marsh biography:

"And on another occasion she took a very severe line when Shields brought round some drawings by a young artist, evidently thinking that the author of Goblin Market would like pictures of  'exquisite child fairies, attired only in gauzy wings'.  He was mistaken.  'Dear Mr Shields,' she wrote the next morning, apologising for having allowed politeness to mask her true views:  'I think last night in admiring Miss T's work I might better have said less, unless I could have managed to convey more.  I do admire the grace and beauty of the designs, but do not think that to call a figure a 'fairy' settles the right and wrong of such figures...'  Child nudity was not acceptable in any form, and 'last night's blunder must not make me the slave of false shame this morning'.  Shields would surely agree that all should 'forbear such delineations, and that most of all women artists would lead the way'.  She would have been dismayed to know the Gertrude Thomson's 'little nudities' were also ardently admired by other men she respected, including Ruskin and Dodgson (Lewis Carroll), though her sense of their indecency would have been confirmed by the latter's coyly flirtatious request that the artist make friends with 'any exceptionally nice little nudity' who was willing to be victimised for his photographic benefit...
Christina's objections to naked fairies were based on the perceived spread of pornography and the demand by clients of high-class brothels for the sexual services of young girls.  Her views may have been narrow, but they were not foolish."

I thought it very interesting that Christina Rossetti has these objections, as I have found some modern fairy imagery rather queasy.  It is not to object to fairies in general, discussion or depiction of, just those very specific images.  I do not think there is any justification to depict fairies as naked children.  There is no particular reason for fairies to be depicted naked at all, unless you want to.  Fairy lore does have a sexual content, but not historically, I think, involving children.  But I don't want to think about it that much, I'd rather get back to fairies in dark folk and weird folk.

Thursday 12 September 2013

Venerating the Sun

Yesterday evening felt like Autumn, and I started thinking about saying goodbye to the Summer and the Summer Sun.

Enchanted Tarot card
I was reading some New Scientists, and there was an article about Biosphere 2.  The Biosphere project was a real-life experiment to research sealed human colonies, with the view to making space colonisation possible, gaining information we might need in the future if we break The Earth beyond repair.

New Scientist 27 July 2013

The Biosphere group leapt straight in: setting themselves the task of living in a sealed world, with nothing taken in for two years.  The facility was to prove that it was possible for humans to live in a closed environment - with the help of sunlight - it was the one thing required from outside.  Unpredicted complications meant the environment wasn't stable, oxygen levels fell.  Struggling to complete the task without having oxygen pumped in, the experimenters each day watched the Sun, hoping for sunshine, for the plants to photosynthesise, to make oxygen.  In that sealed environment, where they knew precisely that they were dependant on sunshine to survive, the participants reached a point when they were about to naturally venerate The Sun. 

We are all equally dependant on the Sun, but it doesn't feel immediate to us, the way it did in the Biosphere.  To them in their situation it would be natural to venerate the Sun, and this is the position our ancestors were in.  Sun worship is really a very logical thing.

The sun came out today, after last night seeming so bleak.  The butterflies are still on the buddleia, and it isn't winter yet.

Wednesday 11 September 2013

Cuts and Crows

The last couple of days I've been doing my first lino-cuts.  The one from Tuesday is dry so I can show you:

An Illustration for a Chapbook
 
 
Today I've printed a tudor-style rose, and cut a devil.  I'll show you more as they dry.

Another slightly irrelevant point - have you noticed how laden down with berries the rowans are this year?  I took this picture at Wirksworth:

A Very Laden Rowan Tree

If plants producing a lot of berries is an omen, the rowans are definitely ominous this year.

Tuesday 10 September 2013

Stitches on a Leaf

In Fleams there is no tradition of stone memorials.  It is hard to find traces of a society that always had an aim to pass un-noticed.  They remind me of The Bauls of India, musicians and wisemen who wear patchwork to symbolise the multiplicity of religious sources.  Also some sects of Sufis, who wear patchwork for similar reasons.

Fenny is typical of this tradition in Fleams.  A Fleams wisewoman aims to pass quietly through existence, leaving no place of worship nor material sacred objects.  Their aim is to keep their spiritual life immaterial, so their practice leaves nothing on the physical plane - nothing for us to see now - no shrines, no scriptures. 

Doffs are set up outdoors, and may stay until weathered away.  Kate W. Aimson photographed them newly put up - otherwise they would no longer exist.

Stitched Leaf
To see traces of Fleams we have to look very, very closely indeed.

Butterflies are sometimes seen as symbols of impermanence.  They were out in force, a whole rabble of them indeed, in the garden at Aimo's House yesterday.  Today no sign of them as the Sun isn't shining yet.

Monday 9 September 2013

Signs in a Graveyard

My conscience has been bothering me.  Now I am publishing pictures of gravestones on the blog, the question arises, is it right?

When we were in Whitby I saw a sign in a graveyard for the first time, reading, "photos prohibited".  No doubt it was aimed at goths, and said remember these are real peoples' graves and memorials, and family come to visit them, and they don't need you taking photos like they are an attraction.  We have always visited graveyards when out and about:

A cool gravestone in Scotland

But so far, we have just enjoyed the images ourselves.  Now I am publishing them, my conscience has been awoken.
 
Miss Aimson has always taken a lot of photos in Christ Church graveyard, down the road from Aimo's House.  One time, a woman tutted at her, but then as Miss Aimson pointed out, that lady was walking a dog in the graveyard, which signs specifically prohibit.  Miss Aimson is fascinated by a sign at the church, stating "Do not injure the flowers or shrubs, they are sacred to the dead", mostly because she first read it as "Do not injure the flowers or shrubs, they are SCARED OF the dead".
 
Does the passage of time make photography acceptable?  Even if sites like this:
 
 
are memorials to the dead, is it acceptable to photograph them because the people are so long dead?  Or is it acceptable to photograph any memorial, however recent, because memorials are there to make you think of a person, so looking at them is fulfilling their purpose? 
 
I suppose it depends how private you think graveyards are.  Are they there purely for family, or are they for the public as a whole?  Is it just respect for people, living and dead, that matters?  I don't know, but I'm not sure how much longer I will be photographing graves.
 
Update on post: The Grey Dagger, I have looked at tortoiseshells and painted ladies side by side on the buddleia bush, and I can tell them apart.  So that's five different types of butterfly in Aimo's Garden so far...

Sunday 8 September 2013

Zombies and Gravestones

At Wirksworth Festival yesterday!  My favourite thing!  Art!  My favourite thing!  Meeting old friends by chance at arty stuff!  My favourite thing!  Seeing my friends' artwork!  My favourite thing!  The whole town full of people looking at art!  My favourite thing!  Antique shops that are junk shops really!  My favourite thing!

Zombies:
Anyway after that, last night we watched an old horror film.  My favourite thing!  No, calm down now, Kate.  It was a film with real old-timey zombies, made by voodoo in Haiti. 

Old-timey zombies
Maybe you would be offended if you were a practitioner of Voodoo, or Vodou, or Vodun, but to me it was a good film.  It is more related to The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, than a modern zombie film:

Somnambulists zombies?
In Dr. Caligari, the doctor has a somnambulist, whom he keeps asleep, and controls, forcing him to carry out crimes.  In The Serpent and The Rainbow, they are old-time zombies, kept under the control of sorcerers, who sent them into their enemies' dreams, controlling them, and forcing them to commit crimes... see the similarity?

Gravestones:
Here are some fabulous graves from St. Mary's Church, Wirksworth:





Saturday 7 September 2013

T'owd Man

Went to Wirksworth with t'owd man:

Bonsal owd man

and headed straight for St Mary's church to see T'owd Man:

T'other T'owd Man

On the way we saw another owd man and his missis having a picnic on a gravestone:

Picnic on a tomb

Then we went into the church to see Cheryl:

Cheryl's business card, designed by Maia Miller-Lewis

and the Houses of Ka:



Houses of Ka by Cheryl Lewis
Tomorrow is clypping the church, and Maia was invited to hold the candle (big starring role for a not-local.)

Clypping the church ceremony


I'll just leave you with a picture of a very owd man, then my owd man can get on the computer.



T'other T'other T'owd Man