Turning Flax into Linen

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  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2024

Комментарии • 36

  • @CrowingHen
    @CrowingHen 2 года назад +14

    I love your break. It's so elegant. Looks a lot more ergonomic than the ones we use with the handle at the end.
    This is a great video! Lots of good information.

  • @holderm6
    @holderm6 2 года назад +13

    In missouri nettles and hemp were used in a similar fashion. I believe the nettles would have been retted like the flax but wondered if the hemp was done the same way. Also interested in a closer view or how those tools were made. Great video and pretty cool how after breaking those fibers handle. You mention ‘flaxen hair’, ‘tow head’ was another related descriptor.

  • @diamondtiara84
    @diamondtiara84 3 года назад +9

    I learned a few things from this, including where flax comes from; I never even thought about it growing as a plant. It never ceases to amaze me how little I know, glad there are videos like this to improve my education.

  • @GrangerGangster
    @GrangerGangster 3 года назад +18

    It’s too bad that more of our mass-produced clothing isn’t made from linen because it seems like with all the useful byproducts and the fact that it’s an all-natural textile would be really beneficial in a lot of ways, especially for the environment, and especially because it seems like flax would make good use out of otherwise less-desirable ground. It’s such a cool material, no pun intended!

    • @Beaguins
      @Beaguins 2 года назад

      Linen is great! Unfortunately it wrinkles badly, and that's probably why it isn't so popular now. Not many people like ironing.

  • @Thaijler
    @Thaijler 2 года назад +4

    So "fine" linen is not only high-grade, but the threads are fine themselves. Cool.

  • @pennyrobinson4266
    @pennyrobinson4266 2 года назад +2

    Informative! What hard work! I love linen and enjoy learning all about it!

  • @MarcTheUtahan
    @MarcTheUtahan 2 года назад +8

    How has no one said, “Rhett it and forget it?”

  • @steveww1507
    @steveww1507 2 года назад +3

    glad I found this channel

  • @deannamiller205
    @deannamiller205 2 года назад +2

    So labor intensive.

  • @Adnancorner
    @Adnancorner 18 дней назад

    I wonder if you can use comb instead of wooden knife and the pins to separate the high quality fiber.

  • @kellicoffman8440
    @kellicoffman8440 Месяц назад +1

    One aspect of home cloth making in the 18th century was it’s connection to the boycott of taxed British imports patriotic women made their own or did without

  • @flintlock2180
    @flintlock2180 2 года назад +1

    great video.

  • @pauldickfoss8039
    @pauldickfoss8039 Месяц назад

    Linen was also made from hemp. I know it’s easy to say & not think about what was said, but the 18th century definition defines linen as being from flax & hemp.

  • @emmanuelajayi6418
    @emmanuelajayi6418 9 месяцев назад +1

    Am from nigeria.what season can I plant flax is it in the sunny or raining season.and how many types of flax do we have.

    • @pingupenguin2474
      @pingupenguin2474 4 месяца назад +1

      Probably rainy season, I would guess. Linen processing was a big industry here (the West of Scotland) because of the damp air, due to plenty rain.This made the processing easier I think. Flax grows here and in Ireland, so it probably likes the rain. Good luck !

  • @sirj3487
    @sirj3487 10 месяцев назад +1

    There is also the term: "tow-headed".

  • @welcometothewolfpackk2534
    @welcometothewolfpackk2534 2 года назад +3

    Although I'm not a fan of this time period, it was quite educational

  • @PennsylvaniaPanda
    @PennsylvaniaPanda 2 года назад

    God loves you have a great day

  • @Aridanx
    @Aridanx Год назад

    does tow work as animal fodder?

  • @nightfall3605
    @nightfall3605 22 дня назад

    Tow-headed is short blonde hair 🤯

  • @maryexton7929
    @maryexton7929 2 года назад +1

    She skipped "rippling"; the removal of seed pods.

    • @nunyabiznes33
      @nunyabiznes33 2 года назад

      Are the seeds allowed to mature on flax intended for linen than linseed oil?

    • @maryexton7929
      @maryexton7929 2 года назад

      Of course they are allowed to mature. You would need seed to plant next year, would you not?

    • @maryexton7929
      @maryexton7929 2 года назад +1

      Also, surplus seed is fed to livestock.

    • @nunyabiznes33
      @nunyabiznes33 2 года назад +1

      @@maryexton7929 I asked coz I remember reading somewhere that if flax is allowed to go to seed, it would no longer be usable for fiber, so the farmer would have to decide whether he want the seeds for linseed oil or the fiber for linen. I've then just assumed that if they are growing for linen, they then leave a portion of the crop to go to seed for replanting.

    • @Beaguins
      @Beaguins 2 года назад +1

      @@maryexton7929 Flax that is used for textiles would not be allowed to develop seeds. Next year's seed would be produced by a portion of the flax that is reserved for that purpose.

  • @micahmilne
    @micahmilne 2 года назад +3

    You've neglected a vitally important detail to address in any discussion of colonial American history.
    Consider the state of clothing today. Most of us will buy all of our clothing from the mass manufactured fast fashion industry. People no longer understand the value of cloth because of this. The sheer labor involved is invisible to us. We don't see the people working in terrible conditions for hours upon hours to sew our clothing and receive next to no money in return. In factory work, there are restrictions about the presence of toxic chemicals in the cloth, but the same is not true for every step of the manufacturing process carried out before. What of the people who breathe those in? Who live along rivers polluted with chemicals?
    In this video, you've failed to mention that all the labor of 18th century American linen -- the farming, retting, fiber processing, spinning, weaving, sewing -- was often done by people born or sold into the brutality of chattel slavery. You discuss the work of flax processing as if through the lens of a small family farm, but you said it right at the start. This video was shot on a historical reproduction **plantation** -- a large estate, a place of mass production.
    You and I would have worn the fine, long-line linen cloth against our skin, but who do you think was wearing the coarse tow cloth against theirs?

    • @Beaguins
      @Beaguins 2 года назад +2

      The word "plantation" does not mean a farm worked by slaves. And most work done in 18th century America was done by freemen.

    • @StaceyMayer
      @StaceyMayer Год назад

      I remember reading books about Colonial or Pioneer times mentioning that most households endeavored to create enough "linsey-woolsey" for their own family. A durable and reliable fabric, it has a long history of production among early American households; no "evil" needs to be ascribed to it. It was an honorable, durable product created from their own handiwork, whoever made it or eventually wore it. The more coarse parts were often used as fire starter. What clever people we came from!