Monday, 6 June 2011

Natural Fabrics by Julie Fry

Natural Fabrics


Cotton


Cotton comes from plants that produce seed pods filled with ball shaped clumps of cloth fibre. The seeds are separated from the cotton fibre mechanically. The process continues by spinning threads from the remaining seedless white fibre. The threads are woven. Cotton production started in Pakistan Indus Valley more than 5,000 years ago.

Flax




Flax grows to a height of four feet and has leaves that consist of long, tough fibres. Flax has been used since ancient times to make clothing. The ancient Egyptians were the first to make linen cloth more than 4,000 years ago.


Hemp



Hemp comes from the Cannabis Sativa plant. In the 1980s, producers were able to make fione cloth, suitable for clothing, from hemp. This development occurred following the discovery of a process using enzimes that removed the fibres’ roughness while still allowing the fabric to retain its durability. Deisgners use hemp blended with other textiles to make fine cloth. Hemp fibre is resistant to stretching which allows clothes made from hemp to reatin their shape and size.



Hessian



Hessian (is a woven fabric usually made from skin of the jute plant or sisal fibers,[or may be combined with other vegetable fibres to make rope, nets, and similar products. Hessian, a dense woven fabric, has been historically produced as a coarse fabric, but more recently it is being used in a refined state known simply as jute as an eco-friendly material for bags, rugs, and other products.



Images of Natural Fabric from the Cloth House, London










Samples of natural fabric
From the Cloth House



Stephen Jones started as a student at St Martin’s in 1980. He opened his first Millinery Salon – in Covent Garden – in the late 1980s. His work is included in the permanent collections in the V&A and le Louvre.

Spring/Summer 2008
The Spring/Summer Model Millinery collection comprises 15 abstract model hats inspired by a retreat to a mid-century Craftsman cabin in the Utah desert. All the toiles for this collection were created by Stephen himself in the desert.
Rock formations, bleached mesquite, dawn & dusk.



Desert Rose

Spring/Summer 2008



Bryce

Spring/Summer 2008



The Cabin,

Spring/Summer 2008

Spring/Summer 2003

The South. Lands of our imagination. Exotica, mystery, romance, fun, sensuality. The warm sun cooled by Pacific breezes. Nature, flowers, leaves, shells and straw.
Shapes: the trilby, beret, beach hats.



Rock-a-Hula



Trader Steve


Myth



Bounty


Judy Bentinck set up her own label in 2002. Originally named "Portland Hats", she has recently rebranded as "Judy Bentinck" to emphasize the exclusivity of her product. She gained her degree in printed textiles at Liverpool College of Art,then later moved into the world of costume design, working for the RSC, the BBC and the Royal Opera House. Judy made her first hat while teaching costume design at the Bristol Old Vic Theatre School, and her passion for the exciting sculptural aspects of millinery led her to train with Rose Cory - Royal Warrant Holder and world renowned teacher.



HD_13
Ivory base covered with a spray of natural heckle feathers, peacock hurl and coque feathers.

Spring/Summer 2011



COCO_22
Looped crin mounted on straw base with coque feathers.

Spring/Summer 2011


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