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Great Women Building a Gracious World Volume 2, Issue 4 July/August 2007
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Summer in Tazewell
Photo by Leslie Shelor Our Favorite Fiber Connections!
Steal our Button! (Load to your server, please!)
May/June Contributing Writers Caryn Ackerman, Sandra Bennett, Aida Costa, DandyLion, Grace Hatton, Charissa Clark Howe, Kat LeFevre, Laura Lunsford, Laura Murphy, Karen Phoenix, Libby White
Fiber Femmes is published bi-monthly on-line by:
Fiber Femmes 12206 Squirrel Spur Road Meadows of Dan, Virginia 24120 Email: fiberfem@fiberfemmes.com Submissions: submissions@fiberfemmes.com Advertising: advertising@fiberfemmes.com
Editor: Sandra Bennett Publisher: Leslie Shelor
While every precaution has been taken to ensure accuracy of material published, Fiber Femmes cannot be held responsible for opinions or facts provided by authors, advertisers or agencies. Authors retain ownership of their material and reproduction without their written consent is prohibited. Agencies, advertisers and other contributors will indemnify and hold the editors harmless for any loss or expense resulting from claims or suits based upon content of any advertisement, defamation, libel, right of privacy, plagiarism and/or copyright infringement. The views expressed by contributors are not necessarily those of the editor and publisher.
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Fiber Femmes Favorite Fellow Fiber Femmes Favorite Fiber Fellow of 2007 Article by Leslie Shelor
All Photos by Michael Cook
Our Fiber Fellow nominations were greeted with lots of votes; it seems that all of the gentlemen are popular. Since each of them makes a valuable contribution to the fiber world, we congratulate them all for their hard work and dedication to their crafts. We take great pleasure in announcing that Michael Cook is the winner of our contest for this year, and has been crowned our Favorite Fiber Fellow of the Year for 2007. Special thanks to Barbara Greenstein for her nomination of Michael as Fiber Fellow of the Year. Both Barbara and Michael will be receiving a memento of the occasion!
In 2004 he began raising giant moths. As many of you know, Michael maintains a beautiful and informative web site that he calls, delightfully, Wormspit.com, launched in March of 2004. Recently, with help from a friend, Sam, who is a designer, Michael has improved the site with some beautiful graphics. The flash-based graphics header for the front page is wonderful and captures the feel and theme of the site with a slideshow of pictures and unique graphics. The web site has become a valuable resource, with information about types of silk moths, articles about silk work techniques and processes, Michael's silk projects, a library of scanned copies of old books on silk work, and a valuable list of links to other silk resources. The web site receives between 400 to 1000 page hits per day. Michael has been working with Ralph Griswold of the University of Arizona to digitalize his extensive collection of public domain books about silk. Clues
for the Clueless, Michael's personal blog, also records his many projects
and
Michael's talents and versatility have received both local and national attention. In 2004 he taught a workshop on silk at Kid & Ewe in Boerne, Texas; his first big silk presentation. More recently he appeared on the news in San Antonio, to publicize the Texas Folklife Festival and his participation in the event. He wrote an article for Knitty entitled "Silk is the Bomb[yx]" that appeared in the Spring 2006 issue. Most recently Michael was filmed for an HGTV television segment on "That's Clever", which will appear on January 5 at 1 PM. Step by step instructions for making the woven bookmark featured on the show appear on HGTV's web site. Michael is certainly not resting on his laurels; he has many plans for the future. He wants to learn to weave on a broad loom and keep learning more techniques for working with silk. In January he intends to take a class on Saga Nishiki, a Japanese silk working technique. Because of the lack of good information available about working with silk from cocoons, Michael would like to soon start work on a book about silk for handspinners. Research for a book would ideally include a trip to India to see the current sericulture and industry. He also hopes to publish an article on silk reeling in a national fiber arts magazine in the near future. This spring Michael will be giving presentations about silk and cardweaving to the Dallas Handweavers and Spinners Guild and the Fort Worth Handweavers Guild, and at the Texas Discovery Gardens and the Wildflower Fiber Retreat. It was great fun working with Michael on this article, and he really entered into the spirit of the Favorite Fiber Fellow of the Year contest! We're proud, and honored, to have him represent Fiber Femmes as Fiber Fellow of the Year! ______________________________________
Leslie Shelor of Greenberry House, a native of the Blue Ridge Mountains of Southwest Virginia, grew up surrounded with artistic and musical people around her. An interest in fiber arts developed early, and she learned to spin in Maine with the shed coat of her Samoyed dogs. Returning home in the 1990s, she was given her great-grandmother's spinning wheel and became interested in learning much more about fiber and fiber arts. Eventually she became a breeder of German Angora rabbits and produces quantities of luxury Angora fiber, spinning and creating unique designer yarns and apparel. She blogs At the Top of Squirrel Spur and is publisher of Fiber Femmes.
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