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THE LETTERS OF MARSILIO FICINO Vol 9 (Liber X)
This volume brings together correspondence from the last decade of Marsilio Ficino’s life, spanning the period late 1489 to spring 1491.
Travels With My Harp

Travels With My Harp

Mary O’Hara

Finalist in The PEOPLE’S BOOK PRIZE, Winter 2013




£25.00 Hardback


Shepheard-Walwyn
(Publishers) Ltd
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London SW14 8LS, UK

Phone (44) 020 8241 5927

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TARTAN WEAVER'S GUIDE


67pp 142 tartans illustrated in full colour bibliography glossary  • 252 x 105mm • 4-colour cased binding

ISBN 9780856830785

Hardback Price £ 9.95
  Hardback
 

'Before commercialisation spoiled the patterns and the early synthetic dyes spoiled the colours, tartans were works of abstract art composed by local weavers using the limited range of colours they could obtain from natural sources. The patterns were clear and bold and the colours neither gaudy nor artificially faded and their like are seldom equalled today. To reproduce them is a worthwhile aim for any weaver.'  This is how James D Scarlett, a recognised international authority on both tartan and handloom weaving, describes the early days.

The author combines practical experience with a grasp of Highland social history in this book, which although aimed specifically at the amateur tartan-weaver, contains much of which will be of interest to students of either subject.

The weaver is provided with precise hints on the special requirements of weaving tartan including threadcounts, accompanied by historical notes for 228 tartans, 142 of them illustrated in glowing colours which seem to reflect the lakes, sky, hills and valleys of Scotland.

There are concise and informative articles on tartan pattern, colour, yarn, thread counts, yarn thicknesses and the actual weaving of the cloth.

'The basis of any tartan, as the author points out, is a simple two-colour check which may be varied by the addition of over-checks, bands and stripes in contrasting colours so arranged as to give a balanced and harmonious pattern.'

The author's interest in tartan brought him early into contact with the Scottish Tartans Society and with the late Donald C. Stewart with whom he collaborated over several years in a serious study of the subject, collaboration which resulted in the publication of a number of books, most recently his definitive work Tartan: The Highland Textile.

His advice has been sought on the design of new tartans, notably the American Bicentennial, but his main interest is in the old ones. As one of the few specialist handweavers of tartan, he concentrated on making facsimiles and wove a reproduction of a pre-1745 plaid for the National Trust for Scotland's Centre at Culloden. In 1994 he handed his extensive archive, covering about one hundred years of serious tartan research, to the Highland Regional Archive for its preservation and for the benefit of future students.

He is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and lives in Strathdearn with his Highland wife.

Author Details:
James Scarlett has devoted many years to the study of tartan both independently and as a close colleague of D.C. Stewart who bequeathed him all his work on tartans, published and unpublished, together with what he possessed of his father D.W. Stewart's work in the field. The new book therefore draws upon a continuous line of research reaching back almost one hundred years.
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