Blog Update

The Centre for Textile Conservation's blog is well worth following. Blog posts by the Centre's staff and students are varied and fascinating, among recent reports are:

Reports on the Centre's recent success in securing major grants for the Barkcloth and Tapestry research projects, and on other current research projects such as the highly successful ReCreate project and the Painted Textiles project.

Updates on the work of the MPhil Textile Conservation students:
Conservation of a seal gut parka
Challenges of conservation dyeing
Dissertation research in Shetland
Fluorescent labelling of adhesives

As well as student successes:
CTC graduate shortlisted for Conservator of the Year 2015
CTC student awarded Certificate of Excellence

And reports on PhD students' research and success:
Julie Wertz Turkey Red
Jing Han  Dyeing in Ming and Qing China
Lucie Whitmore The intangible history of costume

Sign up for the blog to get a real insight into the work of the Centre's staff and students.

Major Research Grant Successes

 Frances Lennard, Senior Lecturer at the Centre for Textile Conservation has secured not just one, but two major research grants.

Barkcloth Project

Unique, preserved textiles from the Pacific Islands are coming under the microscope courtesy of an innovative collaboration between textile conservation experts at the University of Glasgow, botanists at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, and barkcloth specialists at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. The project is supported by a major grant of nearly £1m,  from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) and will run for three years from November 2015. Frances Lennard, Senior Lecturer in Textile Conservation, will lead the project.

Barkcloth is a very distinctive art form and close study of it can tell us a lot, not only about the plants that were used to make the materials, but also about the people who made them.
We will investigate the history of Pacific barkcloth, also known as tapa cloth, which is made from the inner bark of the paper mulberry tree and other plants. By studying the material closely, it is hoped that we will gain new insight into the lost skills, culture and knowledge associated with this ancient craft.

Tapestry Monitoring

This project represents second phase of a project originally funded by the AHRC when the TCC was in Winchester. This new two-year project will be funded by a grant of £200,000 from the Leverhulme Trust. Project collaborators are the Centre, Historic Scotland (the Stirling Castle tapestry project), Glasgow Museums (to inform the re-display of the Burrell Collection) and the Dept. of Engineering at the University of Glasgow. The research will investigate whether proven engineering techniques, such as computational modelling and digital image correlation, can inform our understanding of the effect of different conservation and display techniques

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