Working with Flax and Nettles

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 79

  • @AnnaMorris411
    @AnnaMorris411 3 роки тому +3

    I was married to my soul mate in a linen wedding gown I can vividly remember every seam and edge. The fine linen lace may have been crocheted? It was absolutely perfect for a summer evening wedding! The vail was also crocheted and hung from a small linen cap, (so vintage), also matching linen hankies with the groom!
    Sadly, I wore it last time to our daughters long planned for wedding, six months after my husband passed away.
    I know there’s something very special about that very fine linen and the lace!

  • @kiradoyouknow
    @kiradoyouknow 3 роки тому +7

    The baby feeling the flax on her cheek...so precious 😍

  • @elizabethwang7408
    @elizabethwang7408 2 роки тому +1

    Some new details I did not know about. Also he is a great teacher and has SO much fun!

  • @lajwantishahani1225
    @lajwantishahani1225 6 років тому +6

    Very interesting. Good to see these old skills of working fibers with hand are still continued and hopefully passed down to the next generation.

  • @aiai-j7i
    @aiai-j7i 6 років тому +9

    Woodlands TV, where have you been all my life? So happy I came across your channel! Just the sounds of the forest alone made me happy :)

  • @frankparrish2928
    @frankparrish2928 4 роки тому +8

    I like how they focus on the "industrial quality" of the cottage industry. Nicely done. Everyone imagines rowing the Viking long-ship but first they had to weave that sail!

    • @calliarcale
      @calliarcale 2 роки тому +2

      The craziest thing about the Viking sails is that they were made from what seems like the worst possible fiber: wool. Wool seems like an insane fiber for sails, because it's so heavy. In the age of sail, it was all cotton, but the Vikings didn't have access to cotton. They did have access to linen, but they weren't using it to make sails. As it turns out, there was a specific breed of sheep used to produce the wool; modern commercial sheep breeds do not produce a suitable wool, which is why nobody thought they could possibly have had woolen sails. But they did.

  • @deeaden2025
    @deeaden2025 6 років тому +3

    I don’t quite know how I got here, but I’m glad I did. This was fantastic! Thank you for sharing.

  • @worldofsurvival
    @worldofsurvival 7 років тому +39

    Fascinating stuff! Also very well presented and explained by Allan.
    Makes you wonder how well we would cope if thrown in to a world without electricity and metal tools!!

    • @itsjustrenee1320
      @itsjustrenee1320 6 років тому +1

      worldofsurvival Do or die. 😣

    • @rubygray7749
      @rubygray7749 4 роки тому +2

      Looks as though this could happen sooner than we expected! And I have no nettles!!

  • @zagcatt
    @zagcatt 7 років тому +28

    will be calling them stringing nettles from now on . lovely vid.

    • @salahfathi4610
      @salahfathi4610 4 роки тому

      Egyption flax
      We have all kinds of Egyptian raw linen and its derivatives for the manufacture of textiles and use in many other things. Please contact:
      Mego565@gmail.com
      Egypt: 00201276007225
      France:0033753934337
      Thank you
      Salah

    • @PG-wz7by
      @PG-wz7by 3 роки тому

      Lovely pun, thank you 😊

  • @Braddha
    @Braddha 4 роки тому +1

    Wonderful... I have been curious about the use of flax AND nettles for the longest time... Beautifully explained and demonstrated... Amazing that these items - once SO essential to our ancestors - are relatively forgotten today... Much thanks.

    • @calliarcale
      @calliarcale 2 роки тому +1

      Flax isn't forgotten. ;-) It's still heavily cultivated, and the dew-retting process is still preferred -- but everything is now all mechanized, of course. It's the fiber used to make linen.

  • @mooseknuckle8334
    @mooseknuckle8334 5 років тому +6

    You had me with the thumbnail hahaha. You and your folk seem like great people.
    Cheers from Nova Scotia!!

  • @justinholifield7708
    @justinholifield7708 7 років тому +14

    brilliant film good to see old skills being kept alive.

  • @LizzieDeanMakes
    @LizzieDeanMakes 6 років тому +3

    I have a drop spindle and have been wanting to make nettle fibre yarn for a few years now but might try growing some flax/linseed and try linen too - great video! Xx

  • @elliotsingh2329
    @elliotsingh2329 5 років тому +32

    I think you might be able to get the nettle fibers a bit finer by boiling them on wood ash (i.e. In lye) and scraping them (in addition to retting of course); this is how ive seen a lot of bast fibers extracted in Japan

    • @salahfathi4610
      @salahfathi4610 4 роки тому

      Egyption flax
      We have all kinds of Egyptian raw linen and its derivatives for the manufacture of textiles and use in many other things. Please contact:
      Mego565@gmail.com
      Egypt: 00201276007225
      France:0033753934337
      Thank you
      Salah

  • @karate4348
    @karate4348 3 роки тому

    because it knows I'm filming it.! ... love it. thanks-you for such wonder.

  • @motooilermotooiler9597
    @motooilermotooiler9597 2 роки тому

    great people. was glad to watch this material.

  • @timothymitchell9956
    @timothymitchell9956 4 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing your history, culture and knowledge. Fascinating!

  • @bon47ful
    @bon47ful 6 років тому +5

    Wow...”streaming flaxen waxen”! Such an interesting video. Thank you.

  • @thedruiddiaries6378
    @thedruiddiaries6378 6 років тому +3

    Thats wonderful! Appreciate the detail you gave us. Thank you!

  • @elainesnyder6307
    @elainesnyder6307 6 років тому

    Well done. Nice to see this hasn't been lost.

  • @crystalheart9
    @crystalheart9 6 років тому +6

    Fascinating stuff, how did people ever figure this out?

  • @christopheropstad7266
    @christopheropstad7266 6 років тому +1

    Very fascinating! I think I have nettles growing in my back yard and now I want to try to harvest them!

  • @Ilovethebush
    @Ilovethebush 2 роки тому

    Thank you for this.
    I've been making banana fibre 2 ply and it is exhausting. I am only able to make about 7m per day in 30-minute bursts between other household tasks.
    However, I am wanting to speed up the process and spin it instead of plying it.

  • @claudine7985
    @claudine7985 5 років тому +1

    Love it! Thank you for making the video!

  • @P61guy61
    @P61guy61 4 роки тому

    Excellent. Thank you for posting

  • @annak2922
    @annak2922 9 місяців тому

    Great information! Thank you!

  • @LizMcNamara47
    @LizMcNamara47 6 років тому +4

    Thank you Allan, very labour intensive but worthy work

  • @orangesuitsme
    @orangesuitsme 2 роки тому

    lovely video thank you so much

  • @bon47ful
    @bon47ful 6 років тому

    Bravo, Alan!

  • @dr.lexwinter8604
    @dr.lexwinter8604 4 роки тому +10

    I'm growing a batch of flax, I start the seedlings off indoors as it's winter (Australia, so pretty much an English summer) and he's right about all animals wanting to lay on it. Every time I leave it unattended out of the light box I find it crushed. I don't understand it, but there's something about it that attracts animals and their immediate reaction is to throw themselves down on it. My pets are all obsessed with it. One of my cats keeps trying to eat it, she puts it in her mouth and just gums on it. It's like catnip for cats AND dogs.

    • @moonhunter9993
      @moonhunter9993 2 роки тому +1

      I think it might be the oils. Remember it's omega 3s...like fish oil. Might explain the cat's fascination with it.

  • @WonderingGreenMan
    @WonderingGreenMan 6 років тому

    Interesting stuff! Amazing how these important skills get lost over time! Thank you for sharing this!

  • @amaris7649
    @amaris7649 6 років тому +6

    Had to laugh about the animals wanting to lie on it - I'm always chasing my cat out of the flax patch and then trying to fluff up the areas he's flattened.

  • @bluetoad2001
    @bluetoad2001 6 років тому

    very informative, thanks for posting

  • @TheRawfoodgardener
    @TheRawfoodgardener 6 років тому +5

    I would love to try this, I wonder if the tools are hard to find?

    • @tammy-lynnstewart5677
      @tammy-lynnstewart5677 6 років тому +2

      I bet you could make tools that would do the job well!
      I'd love to try!

  • @Latheman666
    @Latheman666 6 років тому

    Awesome!

  • @JayneFrogWoo
    @JayneFrogWoo 6 років тому

    Fabulous information.

  • @badgersbunk7311
    @badgersbunk7311 6 років тому

    Fascinating video.

  • @Reality530
    @Reality530 3 роки тому

    Very sustainable good alternative to cotton

  • @guidoezequieldevincenzi9318
    @guidoezequieldevincenzi9318 5 місяців тому +1

    What is the name of this guy??? I love him! Is the third video I see with him but never found this info. Thanks ✌️

    • @WOODLANDSTV
      @WOODLANDSTV  5 місяців тому

      Hi. I'm glad you like the film. His name is Allan Brown and you can find out more about him and his work on his Facebook page facebook.com/groups/1715837118673266/

  • @LibellulaGlass
    @LibellulaGlass 7 років тому +6

    Fantastic, the best explanation I have heard and understood. Anyone know if I buy some linseeds from the health food shop, whether they would grow? I am a spinner, but have only so far spun already processed flax. Thanks again for the brilliant video.

    • @rubygray7749
      @rubygray7749 6 років тому +3

      You could try. There are 2 types of linseed or flaxseed.
      One is a shorter plant grown to produce high quantities of seed, and the other is much taller to produce lots of long fibre.
      You would need to do more research on the subject.
      This Irish man does an excellent presentation on growing flax, harvesting and processing it for weaving :
      LINEN - Making Linen Fabric from Flax Seed - Demonstration Of How Linen Is Made
      ua-cam.com/video/TFuj7sXVnIU/v-deo.html

    • @maxdecphoenix
      @maxdecphoenix 6 років тому +3

      If you're willing to spend money, why not just order the proper seed from a legitimate vendor?

  • @itsjustrenee1320
    @itsjustrenee1320 6 років тому

    👏👍 good video, thanks.

  • @MysticMuttering
    @MysticMuttering 4 роки тому +4

    Flax fibers are like pizza. Even when they’re “bad,” they’re pretty good

  • @ganainm5113
    @ganainm5113 7 років тому

    Cool video.

  • @tierraenlaboca
    @tierraenlaboca 6 років тому +1

    What is the name of this event/institution that processes these materials? Thank you

  • @susanlansdell863
    @susanlansdell863 6 років тому +1

    I shall look at nettles in a new light.xx

  • @martiadams1534
    @martiadams1534 6 років тому

    fabulous!

  • @Luna-ej4mi
    @Luna-ej4mi 2 роки тому

    But is the flax/nettle yarn strong and lightweight enough to make hats?

  • @JakeWitmer
    @JakeWitmer 2 роки тому

    Not sure if Sally Pointer has an episode on "China jute" or "buttonweed," (Albutilon theophrastii) ...but that's a fiber idiot to see worked. This was great though...thanks!

  • @tutorsurrey
    @tutorsurrey 2 роки тому

    the story the wild swans has nettle weaving in it. That's what brought me here.

  • @lowesonia8551
    @lowesonia8551 6 років тому +4

    Just before this i watched a Belgian Flax to finest linen Factories Immense many different procedures before finished product natural dye best quality bedlinen . Very interesting . Alan 's hands must be sore?reminds me during the War holding skeins of wool for my Mother when once in balls, would knit every evening . No television. Radio probably .I Was in bed. Unless the sirens sounded then to the shelters.. How different life was . Even with war . Better than today . World has too many people.

  • @alejandraparker4180
    @alejandraparker4180 6 років тому

    Peace and blessings. Enjoyed this video. But I am more interested is the surroundings where this video was made. Is this a real neighborhood still thriving in 2018? Is this a commune and where is it located. Would love to see a video of daily life in this community. Thanks. 1/4/18

  • @womanofsubstance8735
    @womanofsubstance8735 6 років тому

    Very interesting.

  • @CoxJoxSox
    @CoxJoxSox 6 років тому +2

    Allan yer hired! :D

  • @Earnshawfully
    @Earnshawfully 4 роки тому

    A close friend of mine pops up and surprises me! (She of the hoary flaxen hair.)

  • @vikchandla
    @vikchandla 4 роки тому

    How long does dew retting take approx?

  • @CoxJoxSox
    @CoxJoxSox 6 років тому

    Was flax used to stuff mattresses too?

    • @maxdecphoenix
      @maxdecphoenix 6 років тому

      Nick Doe maybe for the ultra rich, but they would have likely been using cotton. There were just far too many waste products which could be used as mattress stuffing than squander perfectly usable fiber. Straw, down, animal hairs as a by product of tanning. Most of the poor would have been using a weaved bed roll of rushes or pelts through out the majority of history.

  • @nitro105
    @nitro105 6 років тому

    how do you work with nettles, without them irritating the skin?

    • @BillWiltfong
      @BillWiltfong 6 років тому +1

      There are lots of videos here that explain that. But, basically you harvest it at the right time and wear gloves. Once you boil or dry the plant, it no longer stings. Boiled nettle leaves are super nutritious food.

  • @theScrupulousBerserker
    @theScrupulousBerserker 3 роки тому

    🤔🧐

  • @aryaprincess2479
    @aryaprincess2479 2 роки тому

    Why is he so cute?

  • @greenfingersgardener822
    @greenfingersgardener822 5 років тому +1

    Did he make his beard from flax lol

  • @dr.lexwinter8604
    @dr.lexwinter8604 4 роки тому

    You can't get a better distaff than a bloody traffic cone with polyester ribbon wrapped around it? C'mon mate, pick your game up!

  • @Bulit.
    @Bulit. 5 років тому

    bruh

  • @poppetx
    @poppetx 4 роки тому

    why do u pretend ur from 500 years ago