vintage clothing online uk

Thu, 29 Jul 2010 04:19:15 -0400





bluerinse Store

On offer is a vintage pair of original Adidas Formel 1 in a UK 11. Not the recent re-issues, these are genuine West German-made trainers from the 1980s.

The trainers are in amazing condition for their age, with few signs of wear. The soles are perfect, with a minor amount of dust picked up in storage, but hardly any wear. In the original black/yellow colourway, Formel 1 was printed on the mesh above the stripes but has faded off, the tongue has adidas branding and all-important ‘Made in West Germany’ upon it (sadly this is also a bit worn, see pics).  The suede is still soft, no scuffs or discolouration. Original inner soles, the adidas branding on each is still perfectly visible.  The only real flaw is that the midsoles are a bit discoloured, but they should clean up fine. Please bear this in mind before bidding, as returns will not be accepted if you have not read the listing correctly. Otherwise in great, wearable condition, or would look great on display with a bit of light restoration.

Please visit our shop for more rare and vintage clothing and footwear!

Any questions please be in touch. Sadly I can only respond to messages sent via ebays messaging service. No e-mails, sorry.

Low price and realistic postage costs.

Please note this is a vintage item and is sold to you as such.

Good luck and happy bidding.

Cheers

The timeless, classic appeal of antique wedding dresses is unrivaled despite the endless number of different types and styles of bridal gowns available today. Women of all ages and from all walks of life appreciate the uniqueness and sheer beauty of a genuine old wedding dress, and especially one that has been passed down from one generation to the next.

The fine craftsmanship and incredible details of most all antique wedding dresses is simply amazing with many modern designers now mimicking the vintage style of days gone by. However, to get the same quality of a true antique wedding dress you will more than likely pay handsomely for the privilege.

Finding the Perfect Antique Wedding Dress

When buying something like a wedding dress, and one that's been previously worn, there are several factors to first consider, mainly the overall condition of the gown itself. Fabric deterioration should be your primary concern as many types of fabrics including silk will weaken over the years, and intricate beading, embroidery, and lacework may all suffer from the ravages of time, even more so if the dress is not stored and cared for properly.

Besides inheriting one from your mother, grandmother, or future mother-in-law, there are several other places to find the perfect old wedding dress. Antique shops, thrift stores, consignment shops, and second-hand clothing stores often have a number of buried treasures unadvertised and hidden behind their walls.

Antique wedding gowns can also often be found for reasonable prices at online auction sites or through online retailers of vintage clothing. Remember the sizes of old wedding dresses will vary greatly, not unlike those that are made and sold today, and will usually run small. Know your exact measurements and the full details of the garment before purchasing to avoid the need for costly returns, especially if you're shopping online as not all merchants offer free shipping for returning items.

When buying used, old wedding dresses, brides-to-be should keep in mind the additional costs of any necessary alterations or repairs in order to stay within their budgets. The cost for cleaning and preserving an older wedding dress may also be higher due to the delicateness of the aged fabric.

If authentic, antique wedding dresses simply aren't a part of your budget, consider a vintage inspired gown of a favored time period such as the Renaissance or the early 1900s.

Cleaning and Preserving Your Antique Wedding Gown

True old wedding dresses will require a certain amount of special care when it comes to the important matters of cleaning and preserving. The cleaning process involved will depend upon the type of fabric used and how old the dress actually is. Fabric should be treated to prevent yellowing and the gown should be wrapped and protected with either museum-quality muslin or PH-balanced, acid-free tissue paper before being stored correctly.

To keep vintage wedding ensembles looking their absolute best, keep boxes flat in an area with no sunlight and moderate humidity and temperature levels, which means away from the attic, basement, or the bathroom closet.

To be sure an old wedding dress doesn't lose its elegant appearance or quality it's highly recommended to check the dress once each year just to see if everything is as it should be, giving you many more years of beauty.

vintage textile soak

Thu, 29 Jul 2010 04:19:17 -0400





I am a “threadborne” artist: my passion is creating fibre art  and this blog is about how I create art with vintage textiles either as whole cloth or from fragments.  Expect inexactitude!

Over several pages here I  would like to share the What, How and Why of a sometimes risky practice. I will be posting  about my latest vintage textile art,  cataloguing  images and descriptions of the work as it goes along or turns out  -or not. (see sidebar below) 

 “Wordborne”

I am writing at length about  rust printing on this Home Page since it is a way to contextualize my various approaches to the creation of other art textiles, vintage or “vintagized”.  It is a way to explain to myself as well as interested readers  why I bother to cultivate interest in vintage textiles. My art takes its cultural  meaning, I believe, from the interplay among technical processes, the provenance of the materials and my own nature and disposition. 

About My Rust Printed and Stitched Vintage Linens  

I am experimenting with rust printing on found linens , both plain and patterened.  I will later stitch them by machine and by hand and maybe print or dye them with other materials, too. I am using vintage hand embroidery thread- Belding’s Artsyl Floss which ceased production in1935.

Basic Rust Printing

 NB: Check the Rust Printing page for more info.

FYI, my basic rust printing goes like this:  I lay old bits of  anything  iron on top of a textile (copper works too), soak that all in vinegar and water, leave it all to react and let the marks begin…This next pic shows the result of rust printing with an iron corn muffin pan. Later, I printed spidery black batik-like designs using a flour resist process then  applied foil and encaustic wax (but  no stitching ).   

Rust printing and fabric decay

I find rust printing is an intriguing process; it allows  a found textile to develop new history in dialogue with the marks I stitch. Eventually the fibres in a rust printed textile will break down and holes will appear, along with other rifts and wrinkles.  Of course, that process may take the proverbial three score years and  but, like everything organic, a rust print will sooner or later decay either naturally or with human (artistic) encouragement.  This adds  a significant layer of content to the art.

Concepts

In this kind of  insecurity lies my attraction to working with vintage textiles in general. Concepts like decay, deterioration, ephemerality, fragility, changed forms, new identities, loss and so on seem appropriate for art made with textiles. These concepts lead me to others  about  making new forms from old textiles or from textiles “made old”.   

Some textiles I create are just plain fun pieces while others have many layers of thought and feeling behind their creation. But all represent the respect I want to give to the processes and the medium that makes up the new form. 

I connect these idea with what happens when I  plant a seed. ( I am a fanatic gardener and seed sprouter and seed saver) Unless the seed dies in its current form it cannot assume the successive forms that lead to harvest – and to new seeds which appear only at the end of the cycle of generation. When I assemble textile fragments from hither and thither, each with its layers of memories and histories, I am committing them to becoming new forms in active memory and so to enter another  cycle of generation, degeneration/decay and then regeneration all over again.  

People often ask me  ”How did you do that?” if they try to excavate the complex surfaces of my textiles.  In my work the What, How and Why often coincide and in manuy ways the  medium becomes the message. 

Disintegrating surfaces in fibre art

It seems to me that textiles have unique qualities and characteristics that favour abundant artistic expression on themes related to impermanence.  So while I love to collect vintage textiles ready- made, I also like to “vintagize” or “degenerate”  textiles myself using various processes and artistic subterfuges. I want to allow emerging signs of decay to assume  an identity in the work, to let them have a voice. 

In the vintage linen panel shown below, the linen began to  disintegrate and tear under my needle. Not seeking to repair the rips, I let the holes take part in the dialogue happening on the surface between the rust and tannin  marks and the stitching.  Take a look : you can see some thick metallic thread hand stitched around some of the tears in the linen . The stitches are not made as repairs but to add some shiny marks to make us look at the spot where thread used to be… 

Foundling Fibre Art AKA Stash Busting

I like the idea of  resurrecting my stash of ”dead” textiles . They  might as well be dead, if they are languishing in boxes unseen and unheard in my studio, destined for someone else’s vintage collection when I am dead and the kids give my stuff back to the sallyanns… 

On the other hand, the vintage textiles I have brought home have  probably been available only because someone stashed and forgot them -  and maybe the stash had  outlived the stasher (“The one who dies with the biggest stash wins”…) 

Stash busting is a great way to assuage one’s guilt over the collecting habit which has consumed many a fibre artist besides me. It  also challenges me to make art out of only what I find at hand – not exactly Arte Povera but a kind of Foundling Art. No need even to take a walk around the block…

Sleuthing vintage textiles

I prefer printing and painting and stitching on found linens, those that have a provenance and a patina, and are open to assuming even more layers of memory and experience in print and stitch. I regularly scour the sallyanns and garage sales for discarded linens.  I love this ”rescue” part of the process and, I admit it,  I get  secret satisfaction when I spy a treasure overlooked or concealed behind grime or wrinkles. 

Stitching the Rusted Linen Art Cloth  

The linen panel below  was printed last year and I left it a long time to see if any fading or tearing would occur before I worked on it. None did. This summer I took it up again. I mounted it on a fine melton-type wool backing (tacking it by hand ) then free-machine embroidered it in response to the rust and tannin marks on the surface of the linen. When the free machine embroidery was done to my satisfaction (f0r this round at least) I began stitching by hand using long and short running stitches in straight lines as contrast to the freer pathways of the machine stitching. For the machine embroidery I used a variegated hand-dyed thread in a range of rusts, yellows, oranges and greys.  I had intended to stitch more black when the black wool melton cloth began to “beard” on the surface I found I did not need to add any black thread. Instead there are now lovely chains of black dots brought up from the back of the work by  the variegated surface thread. The hand stitching is done with vintage 4-ply rayon skeins in yellows and browns to tone contrast with passages in the rust prints. I used my stash of vintage skeins (1895-1935) of Beldings Artsyl Floss that I found at a vintage textile sale. This is quality vintage thread! It is in the collection of the Canadian Museum of Civilisation — http://collections.civilisations.ca/public/pages/cmccpublic/alt-emupublic/Display.php?irn=2120338&QueryPage=QueryF.php&lang=1

  As the pic above shows, some of the linen began to shred and tear under close machine stitching where the rusting was most intense. 

I found handstitching to be  a killer on rust prints. It seems harder to get the needle through the rusted linen;  machine embroidery needles get blunt faster, too. I  have carpal tunnel syndrome and arthritis in my hands so I wear my brace for handstitching and think of the old ladies who stitched at Gees Bend no matter what their pains. Loving the result of the handstitching, I forget the discomforts. I can only hand stitch a little while each day so this is Slow Cloth for sure! 

Rust Marking the Linen

The sources of the marks I responded to in stitch were large chunks of iron, floor nails and steel wool from my husband’s stash (he is a Green Artist working in  found metals). Some maple leaves volunteered to make little black prints –  the linen lay outside on the deck in the warm fall of 2009 under the shedding maple tree; the vinegar helped release tannins that  printed from the leaves.  The alchemy is basic: equal parts vinegar and water poured on to the textile to keep it moist, plus some neat vinegar if the cloth seemed dry. The metals were randomly strewn over the surface of the linen which I folded and patted and ruched and wrinkled up. I covered the lot  loosely with a black plastic garbage bag and let that whole bundle “cook” in the sun for about a week. I checked on it every day (or when I remembered) and moved the metals around a bit, making sure the linen remained moist but that the air could still get at it.

The rusting varied in intensity, ranging from a pale peachy-pink beige  to deep rusty red-brown. All kinds of marks emerged, so exciting! The surprise maple leaves released tannins and printed interesting black marks. 

The Voice of the Work: a Whole Cloth in gestation

The panel is not finished yet so it is not quite a “Whole Cloth” yet even if it is a one-piece panel. 30″ x 60″ for it has yet to give up the whole  of its story. That will be when the stitching is done.

Meantime,  here are some shots of the front of the work in progress.  The back of the work, the fine black melton cloth, holds  another story for another day. As I was working on the linen surface I noticed that the back of the work was looking very interesting. I began to form an impression of maps. The rusted and stitched surface on the front of the work spoke to me of the Earth while the stitching on the back on black wool, with no marks except for those made by threads, spoke to me about star maps and the Heavens. So now I am wondering if to present the panel from two sides.

Rusted and stitched linen panel, 30″ x 60″

Working title (front): Threadborne (Earth) 

 

Detail 1 - Rusted Linen panel 

  

Country Home Magazine is hosting their 3rd annual Junk Bonanza with Ki Nassuer, www.junkbonanza.com , heading up this incredible event Thursday through Saturday, September 11-13, 2008 in Medina, MN. The gals at Red Shed Girls, www.redshedonline.com, have scheduled a fabulous trip to the show, taking care of all the details, so no worries...let the shopping begin!TIP: For the first 500 Early Birds at the Junk Bonanza event...not only do you get the previledge of shopping for two hours prior to the show opening...you will receive a [Country Home Magazine] Good Junk Bag filled with wonderful products, including a sample size package of Vintage Textile Soak!

card christmas vintage

Thu, 29 Jul 2010 04:19:27 -0400





Lori After receiving my first handmade card from a friend, I was amazed at how beautiful and personal it was and was on a mission to find out how to do this myself. So I joined a local Stamp Club and have been hooked ever since. Hope you enjoy my cards! Need to contact me email: smogcat@hotmail.com View my complete profile
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