Tue April 11
We started at the Paisley Abbey which dominates the center of town. Evelyn guided our group through the Abbey.
St. Murrin founded a church on this site in the 6th century. In 1180, thirteen monks from the monastic order from Cluny, France, arrived to start the monestary. The weaving trade in Paisley developed to provide fabric for the monestary. The 12th century abbey has a medieval nave from the time of the founders.
Paisley City Museum. This is a free museum and the oldest municipal museum in Scotland. It houses a collection of over 1100 Paisley shawls.
The retired curator, Valerie Reilly, graciously came back to gave us a powerpoint lecture of the history of the Paisley shawl. From the design's origins in Babylon where it was a fertility symbol, it spread to the Kashmir region of India, and then finally to Europe. The East India company started importing them to Europe in 1780.
Originally the shawls coming from Kashmir were made of pashmina goat fiber that was collected from bushes where the goats would rub it off. These shawls were woven on simple wooden looms and took months to weave. The limited source of the fiber and the time it took to weave these shawls in Kashmir made them very expensive. Josephine, Napoleon's wife, had 200 shawls in her wardrobe. By the late 1700's the shawls were being produced in Edinburgh, Norwich, France, Russia and Paisley on draw looms. Paisley had highly skilled weavers who had previously woven linen.
The town of Paisley in the height of popularity of the Paisley shawls between 1830-1840, had thousands of weavers making these wonderful cloths, then on the Jacquard loom.
An elaborate paisley design could take 484,000 pattern cards to produce it. But the weavers had to be accurate in their weaving, so that by the time they had woven an entire shawl pattern, they were within 1/4" of the required length.
The paisley pattern changed throughout the 100 years the shawls were in fashion The designs became more elongated in the Victorian era. The size of the shawls also changed as women's fashion changed. In the 1850's, the shawls were woven 5' 6" x 11' so they could be folded and used like a coat to fit over crinoline skirts. Here is a "kirking" shawl that women would wear to church the first Sunday after the birth of a child.
When the bustle came into fashion 1865-1870, this was the death of the paisley shawl as the shawls didn't work with the pro
truding bustle shape. Some Paisley weavers found work into the early 20th centuries when “fur shawls” enjoyed a period of fashion popularity. www.paisley.org.uk/attractions/museum.php
Dan Coughlin, the head weaver and shawl curator at the museum was on holiday. We were grateful to Douglas for showing us around the weaving loft.
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The town of Paisley in the height of popularity of the Paisley shawls between 1830-1840, had thousands of weavers making these wonderful cloths, then on the Jacquard loom.
The paisley pattern changed throughout the 100 years the shawls were in fashion The designs became more elongated in the Victorian era. The size of the shawls also changed as women's fashion changed. In the 1850's, the shawls were woven 5' 6" x 11' so they could be folded and used like a coat to fit over crinoline skirts. Here is a "kirking" shawl that women would wear to church the first Sunday after the birth of a child.
Dan Coughlin, the head weaver and shawl curator at the museum was on holiday. We were grateful to Douglas for showing us around the weaving loft.
Douglas, Paisley Museum technician |
Dan does research and rebuilds the equipment and examples of looms used in the shawl industry. He also teaches weaving classes at the museum.
We saw the pattern books of the pint paper designs for shawls. 4/5 of the time to make a shawl was spent on the designing.
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At the peak of the Paisley shawl industry there were 10,0
00 weavers working in their homes and perhaps 20,000 more people supporting the trade. The fine threads, 80 to 120 ends per inch in paisley shawls and the exacting weaving specifications meant the Paisley weavers were highly skilled. Dan has rebuilt several jacquard looms back to working condition in the weaving studio at the museum. He made a shuttle box that holds 10 shuttles for one of the looms.
Paisley is the only place he found that shuttle boxes this large were used on the looms. Here is how the pattern cards were punched for the Jacquard looms that wove the shawls. Once the weaving industry died, most of the looms were turned into firewood. But with Dan’s passion, skill, and dedication, he is bringing the history of the weaving equipment and the art of weaving back to Paisley. Nowadays, people can weave for enjoyment, unlike the past where the weaver was the loom’s slave. One journal of a weaver of Paisley reads “I’m glad to be free of the four posts of misery.”
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Cathy admiring a paisley shawl |
Mart, Judy, and Lynn inspecting a shawl |
In 1704 the weavers union started. The union watched out for the weavers. If trade was bad and the weaving was scarce, they gave the weaver 10 pounds cash and sent them off to America. One such weaver who came to America from Paisley was Alexander Wilson. He went onto to become a leading ornathologist, poet, and president of Princeton University.
Brown & Polson was another famous Paisley company known for their corn flour. Their starch was used as sizing for the linen cloth woven in Paisley. |
A group of volunteers of the Old Paisley Society in the courtyard garden at Sma Shot. |
Clothes drying pulley, found in homes old and new in Scotland |
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10,000 workers were employed in the mills. To allow mothers to work, there was a twilight shift from 5:00-9:00 pm. The cases display mile reels of thread, posters, memorabilia from mill workers, and now all the photographs have been digitalized and are displayed on a large plasma screen. Most of the volunteers who run this museum worked in one of the mills.
When one of the last of the functioning mills was closed, the mill was stripped of equipment for scrap. A few of the machines were salvaged and are on display in the museum
http://www.paisleythread.org/
Barb inspecting a historical document at the museum |
Travellers and Thread Mill Museum volunteers in front of a drawing of the Ferguslie Mill, the last mill which operated in Paisley. |
1 comment:
My great, great grandfather was a weaver from Paisley. I thank you very much for this peek into the history of the town and the craft.
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