Friday 22 March 2013

Calgary Bay memory rug designed,made and owned by Jane Rushworth circa 2011. Size in inches 38" x21"  Materials used a mixture of woollen sources including blankets, tweeds and woollen jumpers. The rug was made in North Yorkshire
The story about the rug.  This rug is a memory rug of Calgary bay on the isle of Mull. I wanted to try using a wider range of colours and thicknesses of woolen fabrics to create more variety within the rug. It is also a memory rug including blanket from my Mother and material from friends and fellow rugmakers. It also reminds me of a fabulous place to be with beautiful blue sea and white beaches. The colours include pinks, greens, blues, purples, yellows, creams, black and grey all of which are as sourced. The thickesses are varied and the rug includes tweeds notably blue and purple ones.
 

Sunday 10 March 2013

Memories


Memories designed and made by Rosemary Beney in Derbyshire it is  20"x30" made with all wool, except for sparks of white leather in 2012-13
The story of the rug is the stripey Boden sweater that I begged the 'love of my life' to give me for the rag rug I wanted to make. He gave it to me and I used to say that I felt like Madame Desfarges as I worked on it, remembering the amazing times we've had together, always stolen, always passionate, exciting,  heavenly, happy, highlights of each year.

Blue Red Absract


Blue red abstract made and designed by Clare Hutchinson Skipton Nth Yorkshire.
I dreamed of a nice soft proddy rug to step onto when I got out of bed each morning. It needed to be the same colours as the velvet quilt which I hand dyed and quilted several years ago. So using an assortment of old blankets and various charity shop tweeds, I set to work with the dye pots. A 100% Merino wool Harrods blanket, a real find from a local Charity Shop and bright pink, took the dyes beautifully, even the blues.
During the dyeing process I used a variety of shades or red, orange, blue and turquoise, some of which I 'spotty dyed' as per Cilla's instructions. Even though I used acid dyes for the rug and reactive dyes for the quilt, the colours were much the same and I was thrilled with the result.
As I find pushing pieces of fabric through from the back of the hessian rather hard on my hands, I used my 'Bodger' (spring-hook tool) to make the rug. I am very pleased with the result and it is such a welcome sight when I get out of bed each morning!

Thursday 7 March 2013

Mum's Rug

This rug was made by my mother Esther (Tess) Mabe, nee Lupton.  She made it in the mid 1980s at the request of my sister Jan for her thatched cottage in Kent.  It now resides in my kitchen in York.  Mum was born in 1917 in the village of Little Crosby in Lancashire where she grew up, but spent all her married life in Kent. She died in 2007.  When I was growing up I remember proddy rugs that she had made in front of our open fire:  they were always of a geometric design with a black border.  But as we grew up and money became a bit more plentiful she stopped making them – I believe this rug was the first she had made for about 30 years. 
I took up rag-rugging and joined Ebor Ruggers in 2009.  My father then gave me her “prodder” which he had kept.  It was made, I would guess in the 1930s or early 1940s, by my mother’s Uncle Ned (born in 1881) of wood from a holly tree and simply shaped into a point.   I use it all the time for making proddy mats.  I wish I had asked Mum more about this craft and its history and practice within her family while she was alive, but I am pleased to think that I am carrying on a family tradition going back now for several generations.
The mat is 51”x 23” (130cm x 60cm) and made out of various textiles which my mother got mainly from the local charity shop where she volunteered.  It is backed with hessian.

Friday 1 March 2013

Cotswold Proddy

Cotswold Rug 27” x 26” designed, made and owned by Jan Haines.  The rug was made in the summer of 2006 in the county of Kent in the South East of England.
During a visit to the Cotswolds for our summer holiday, we called in at the Cotswold Woollen Weavers at Filkins, Gloucestershire.  Whilst looking around at the machines and looms etc., I came upon a large bin on wheels that was full of small offcuts of the woollen fabrics, there were bags nearby which you could use to fill with the offcuts and I paid around a £1.00 a bag.  Needless to say I collected quite a few of these bags, bought them home and proceeded to make my rug.  Once I had sorted them out I realised that there was only two colourways in the pieces, hence the design was born.  A sort of cross through the middle with the lighter colour and the darker around the edge.  There was no rhyme or reason really, just prod them in and make a mat.  It has been in constant use since it was made and is the first thing you step on when you enter my home.  It wears well and a good shake every now and then keeps it looking good.

Pink Daisy

                                     
2 Pink Daisy Mats 22” x25” Designed, made and owned by Jan Haines in December 2010 in the county of Kent in South East England.
I had decided to start a rugmaking group and decided that I would cover most styles of rugmaking. I then made samples of proddy, locker, latch, hooked, plaited which resulted in five new rugs for my home.  I had been making rugs for a good number of years and had collected a selection of woollen blankets.  With the new group starting in January 2011 I did not have much time for dyeing fabrics, so I gathered together the green, white and pink  pure wool blankets and cut the 1/2” strips and then down to 3” lengths.  I drew the design on freehand and went to work.  Once the group was under way I thought I would make a second rug as I had enough blanket left, so I drew a similar design to the first one and they now live either side of the bed.  Both rugs have a strong calico backing sewn over the hessian backing that I worked into.  They were very simply made and a pleasure to step out of bed onto on cold winter mornings.