Making tools depends on other tools to make them. And human hands and minds are the first tools we learnt to use. This is so educational and USEFUL. I'm always looking at "weeds" and plants and thinking, "how else could they be used, apart from mulch?" I live in a different country with different natural resources, but it seems so short-sighted not to recognize how practical our ancestors were. Those little bits of waste bast would have been used as 'fire starters' for sure.
This is brilliant. I know you need to do the academic write up, but I'd also love to see a small (or may not small) book on how to make and use all the tools, aimed at re-enactors and hobbyists. Regardless, I love your videos!
@@SallyPointer oh, excellent! Seems like the majority of your tech is oriented toward textiles, and your textiles toward apparel. I'm a forager, and it would be interesting to know if there are any ancient versions of sieves made using the same materials? I sift acorn flour for fineness, sift cattail pollen to remove (or reduce) the fibrous parts of the anthers, and sift seeds out of chaff Might that have been a part of neolithic processing, too?
It's honestly almost shocking how well that tool shredded your lime bast, and you're right, that upper e-wrap looked and worked FANTASTIC! Can't wait to see what else you're making, Sally!
I'm so relieved to see that, by the end of the video, and obviously through extensive consultation with your colleagues, you've determined the proper use of such a tool, as demonstrated in the final 30 seconds.
Man, I'd love to see you at an event, but I'm stuck in America... I'm very surprised that these tools survived so long, given they're just thorns and a bit of cordage. Such a simple tool but such a big effect; human tool use has really just been one big long history of optimizing production, because making things from scratch takes a lot of time, and I think that's lost on most modern people with modern tools and easy access to shops. It wasn't until I started trying to make some of my own stuff that I realized how VALUABLE even mundane things like a bundle of thorns would have been.
Exactly so, nothing is really "disposable," yet our culture is centered around the idea that nearly everything is disposable. I've taken a lot of time in the last decade learning how to make all sorts of things that other people would buy, fixing things that others would throw away. Soles worn out on work boots? I have a scrap of tire, maybe that could be cut to fit. Found a broken off head of a hoe--hey, maybe I can make a chopping knife with this! It seems far more normal to me to look at the world this way, and very weird to NOT look at things with an eye toward conserving every last bit of usefulness. With our long history of innate frugality, this current culture is the weird way of doing things.
@@paintedwings74 More than that, the current consumer culture is so, so wasteful and bad for the environment. It's destroying the world for the sake of more money lining the CEO's pockets. It's the reason I buy used/pre-owned or refurbished things when I can. One less thing in a landfill, saves me a few dollars too. I'm not amazing at fixing things but I'm getting better at it.
@@pogostix6097 Its even worse than that. It's not that the money is lining the pockets of the CEO's but all the consumers who believe they must live like kings and have kings things and kings money. We the people have chosen and allowed to be the culture of waste at the expense of wildlife and environments. We allow the corporate to ram through the latest and greatest must have thing only to have a greater newer and greater thing a few days later and the thing before can't be upgraded. Designed yet we keep demanding it. There are few people in the world who truly care about the environment or anything for that matter. Consume consume and consume more. Im hoping to go backwards from the main culture. I will push back. Those that were once environmental hippies are now those pushing for more and greater things and demanding you buy them or else face ridicule.
@@abittwisted you'd have to ask the local tribes. Though they might not remember what they used to do. Some do but some don't. As you know... horrible practices that are still happening to this day.
"side tracked by a soap project" lol that sounds VERY familiar. I'm currently spinning up a bag of alpaca fibre on my little Turkish spindle, that I've had for almost a year, to complete a project that I started with a totally different bag of alpaca...... sidetracked is my middle name lol. Lovely to see a new video, Sally :)
That’s a really neat and effective tool, and surely our ancestors would have found that “e-wrap” just as pleasing as we do. Looking forward to seeing the evolution of your Neolithic toolkit!
Your videos are always so interesting! Have you ever worked with swamp milkweed fiber? Asclepias incarnata. It's native to North America so you may not have it there. I recently discovered they have extremely strong, soft fibers that are really easy to work with. I collected the stalks after they sat all winter on the plant. It was almost like they retted themselves and the fibers peeled off super easily. I imagine indigenous peoples here probably used it (they're definitely known to have used wild cotton, Apocynum canabium which is in the same family)
Dogbane and "Indian hemp" are both in the same plant family, and have equally wonderful fibers. Dogbane, especially, has super strong and super SOFT fiber, and I tell you, if I had to wear wool or other coarser fibers, I'd be making dogbane into knickers to save myself from scratching!
I m pretty sure they were used. There are historical references to alternate fabrics fine and lustrous. Much was lost when Cortez brought his terminally ill interpreter wandering willy nilly through the center of now US. One would almost think it had been planned...
@@paintedwings74 I have been collecting dogbane stems from my yard for a couple years now, usually in late fall (leaving some for the critters to make nests with), but I haven't tried to ret them yet. Sometimes I play with bits of them anyhow, decorticating by hand and scraping the flakes of bark off with my fingernail. I've brushed some of it until it's broken down into its individual elementary fibers, which are short like cotton, and even spun a tiny bit. I have no plans or goals, I just think it's fascinating. I do wish the North American hemp fiber industry would take off - I want cottonized hemp to replace cotton for water reasons and climate reasons! But I do love to play with my dogbane! If you know of any resources (people, videos, websites, etc.), please share! I have found very little about dogbane fiber. It's all over my neighborhood and I resist the urge to steal it from my neighbors' yards every winter!
@@froggydoodle808 I think my research on how to process dogbane is long enough ago that I'd struggle to relocate it all, but I'll take a look through my favorites. What I discovered sounds like what you discovered. Trying to ret it is not particularly useful, since the fibers are strong, but not flax-long, and you end up with a better quality if you just work it out by the piece. It is a beautiful, cheery plant, so much so that I don't mind in the least that it's not willing to yield to our hypotheses of how to make it more workable! I've discovered a patch of native hemp that I'm hoping to use a bit later this year. Such a great plant! Where I live used to be the hemp center of the nation, during WWII. What a loss and a waste, when that industry was shut down.
Nice work. Yup, that should work just fine heckling flax. I use my mini wool combs to heckle the small amount of flax I grow every year. So yeah, likely was a multipurpose tool. Be useful combing ends of wool locks for spinning & nalebinding joins… cleaning furs & suede, once broke in even long hair brushing. Sweet little tool.
I thought the little credit card sized photography scale was so neat that I tracked down "Past Horizons - tools for archeologists UK" and ordered two of them 😂
So interesting! Thanks for sharing your research and experimentation with us Sally. It's always a fascinating watch. The bonus cat footage was much appreciated :)
One of the things I learned as a child with long hair, is that you start brushing out a tangle right near the ends - get that cleared, and then brush from a little higher up, and a little higher up, until you've moved all the way up to the scalp. I think you would get less breakage and tow from your raw materials if you treated combing them into fibres the same way.
I think it's wonderful that you and your colleagues are sharing your research with the public, both online and off. You make it so accessible and friendly.
That is ingenious! The first thing I thought of once you began showing how to use that on the lime bast was - what might it do for wool? The sole time I've ever handled any tool even a LITTLE like that was when our class (primary school kids, in western Texas) was shown how to card wool with the sort of tools the Navajo people use. (Which if you can't tell, was a VERY impactful day of learning, because I can even recall how my hands smelled after, and I'm in my 40s now!) I made my first attempt at sourcing and making some cordage from plants growing right around me, but it did not work out; the plants I chose didn't behave at all in helpful ways, heh. But I did learn a lot about what to look for, and these plants are - well I'm not sure WHAT they are, the local colloquial name is "hedge-bush" which as I'm sure you can understand is the least accurate thing ever. Some sort of fast growing shrub, but since it had very straight stems and looked quite a lot like the nettles you've used in past videos, I thought it might work. Nope! Got all brittle and powdery. However I do know we have some type of cane or bamboo around here too, invasive stuff that no one will mind me taking as much as I want. And that DOES split into halves, so presumably if I do it right, that can be made to split much finer. I'm just waiting for the right time, when it has NOT been raining buckets every afternoon, to go out and grab some!
Are you still in Texas, Beryllahawk? I could probably make some suggestions on plants you could use for fibers, if that's where you live now. I don't know what your local cane is, if it's phragmites or bamboo or even a native river canebrake (that was good stuff but is now mostly endangered).
@@paintedwings74 I am in Mississippi now actually! I didn't know Canebrake was a plant! There's a big fancy subdivision on the west side of my city named that, but I had no idea where they got the name from. Given how rampant the "cane poles" are, I doubt they are canebrake specifically. I have never heard of phragmites but I'm definitely going to look into that. Thank you for this!
Dear Sally, I love watching your videos cause I love those ancestry tools and how they improved their lives. I think, this thorn-tool you can also use to brush human hair (not only cats 🐱🙂)
Absolutely fascinating watch! I was thinking of how perhaps these thorns could be used in heckle of some kind, and then I see that paddle you showed at the end! Looking forward to when you discuss that in future. Glad too to see the cat very happy with the historical tool at the end there too
Wow! It seems so simple in hindsight but the results really ups the quality of the fiber work! I'm in Southern Arizona so my available fibers aren't even close to most of what you show, yet through experiments after watching your videos I've found plants that are adequate (if not ideal) for cordage beyond the traditional plants used by the native Americas in the area. I'll have to find the right local equivalent to make a fiber comb the next time I'm foraging. Great video, Thanks!
@@jennifergamble3272 yes I can get yuca about 10 miles from home. I use it for paint brushes too. I've been experimenting with making cordage from "weeds" that grow fast and are less desirable in the yard. (Like the invasive "pig weed" amaranth with the crazy sticker tops that no one can tell me if they are an edible variety.)
@@angelduncan9147 if you have amaranth, you have the edible variety. It's just a matter of figuring out whether or not it's worthwhile to sift out and winnow the seeds!!! The only difference that makes some amaranth preferred over others is the size of the seed, but what is called "pigweed" around me is a perfectly decent seed size, even though it wasn't bred to be a large seed.
I'm in the USA, and last year, I found the native thorny honeylocust trees growing somewhere. I've seen the ones planted in urban areas before, but they are a variety that doesn't have thorns, so I was very surprised to see the thorny one. The thorns are very long, and I had been wondering what they could be used for. They're not individual thorns like those blackthorns, but they have multiple thorns branching off of each other. It could potentially still be used somehow. I also had someone give me a small number of porcupine quills and I wondered what those could be used for. But they have a barbed texture, which might not work for this.
Fascinating. When you used the tool the first time and it separated the tree stuff into such regular consistent ribbons I blinked in surprise at the tool's effectiveness. Thank you for sharing this.
All textile tools are really for scratching the cat 😊 love it ❤ thanks for your videos Sally, I’m going to try out some of these techniques to make my own fiber prep tools! I find it so fascinating what simple but highly effective tools we can make ourselves
That’s fascinating! Especially as I have a whole load of blackthorn that’s I’ve been looking to use on a craft project like this!! Now to research how to ID, forage & prepare lime bast…. 😊
Thank you for this! So fascinating. Yes, I'm sure that the original use of this tool was to scratch a kitty, and, at some point, someone realized the tool could be used for .... other things!
Lovely. Valuing our commonality with our neolithic ancestors is certainly one of the tools that will help us address modern problems of imperialism and colonialism. The consistency of your cordage is very satisfying to see. I need to keep honing my skills. :-)
I didn't know such long thorns existed outside of the african savannah! If I ever encounter such things, I will be sure and remember how useful they are. Thorns here are either rose thorns, quarter inch spikes, or small raspberry type splinters to bedevil you for days.
See if you have hawthorn trees in your area, or black locust trees. Either one could provide strong, sharp thorns that are longer than rose thorns, if not quite so long as the thorns Sally Pointer has access to.
I personally see a multi-purpose tool here. As you demonstrated, an easy way to make fine fibres for cordage. I also see a Felting tool. It could be used to turn Protein Fibres into textile material, by repeatedly stabbing it into fibre bundles, for use as blankets, ground mats, Insulation, or even clothing. I'm not saying that the people of the time period were doing this, but it could have been used in such a manner. And it wouldn't be such a leap of the imagination to think they wouldn't have figured this out.
NOW i shall collect the Thorns from Chickasaw Plum Trees as i Prune them back. Tree's Bark is Beautiful, always thought i should try to use it for something. *Thanks!*
I think I am going to cheer really hard, all the way over here on the West Coast near Seattle, when you finally get your degree! Also, thank you for using the sizing/color calibration card and keeping it in view!
I love your videos, Sally. I have tried several of the techniques you have demonstrated and this is definitely another I will do. I am going to try it on fleece. You are a wonderful advertisement for the Exeter MSc, I sat there watching thinking that’s it, end the job and sign up! Will you be giving talks on your findings when you have finished?
brushes are really just useful for so many things outside of this textile processing application i imagine people were making and remaking these regularly
no kidding, my husband just came home with a basketful of thornless honey locust (which apparently cast thorns occasionally?). was wondering what to do with them. timely!
Thank you for your work. Is there anyone else doing your type of work, showing detailed experimental archaeology on youtube? (like Dr. James Dilley does with flint work). Thanks again.
Thanks for sharing. Really interesting tool. I wanted to make a flax hackle but the prices of nails are just crazy. Maybe the black thorn is the way to go 😍
this is insanely cool !!! it will never cease to amaze me just how ingenuitive humans are. good luck on your dissertation, and if the paper(s) you write are open access i'd be interested in reading them !!!
This is fascinating! I was watching this and thinking of more "modern" tools, and surprise! You showed some of the items I was thinking of toward the end. I'll look forward to the next one!. Thanks so much.
This is such a nifty thing to see in action, because the fiber combing principle is still such an integral part of textile making even now... That said, your statement about them actually being for scratching the cat is a theory that I think will be widely adopted by feline academics. 😂
i finally found thorns!! im not sure what tree it is, but some branches had been trimmed at a local park and i noticed the beautiful spikes! not as large as yours but im hoping they'll work
I’m largely ignorant of all the fiber types used at this point, but my first thought was that it could have been used as a felting tool for animal fibers. Would that have been a possibility that early on, using fibers that were found on the thorns as animals brushed against them maybe?
right now i'm trying to make some natural soap and i've been making some fibers (using more modenr tools ;) ) from nettle... and I love making such things. And I love that you're sharing your skills on youtube so other people can also try to make it. Keep going and show people how to relax by keeping contact with nature and making their own crafty natural things
@@catherineleslie-faye4302 thank you for giving me the time of day to explain that, and I apologize for making you explain. I'm disabled in a much more minor way, but I should have known better than to make this very ableist assumption.
Just while watching this video, tried twining combed wool tops. It worked really well. Off now to collect brambles and nettles to twine also. Have a small exhibition on Saturday at the Ridgewood centre, Chipping Sodbury, South Gloucester with our Weaving, Spinning and Dyeing group. Thanks for all you inspirational videos, I have learnt a lot.
Always nice to see a little Welsh representation. btw, the word (colour) 'Ddu' is pronounced like the English 'the' (vowel variation, the apple, the umbrella).
Fantastic. I will definetely make this tool. Incidentally, our cordage making speed is about the same. Throughout the video I was making a fine cord from a yellow iris leaf, dried and soaked. Thank you for sharing
I love this!!! I’d be super excited to go to one of the neolithic open days you mentioned, but I think they’re a bit far from home currently :( best of luck for the msc, and I’ll look forward to seeing more about the other tools!
Good job! Please make video about all these amazing tools at 18:42 Especially that spatula tool with thorns for carding a wool (sorry I don't know right English term and dictionary misunderstands me). My colleague artist uses same iron thing for felting and we are both fans of our Eneolithic archaeology so she would be really happy to see such reconstruction in work! I live in north Kazakhstan and there are lots of mounds of bronze age; few of them contained felt pieces around 4 thousand years old and it was a big find for ones who understand (others just need GOLD lol; they need to watch more of such reconstructing works to realize wonder of history evidences which looks like piece of rubbish at first sight)
Gutted I didn't make it to Bryn Cellu Ddu this year. I first saw you there a few years ago and was knocked out by your demonstration of nalbinding and sprang.
As a modern day spinner, knitter, weaver, etc, it is really a thrill to realize how very close my tools are to those used by ancient peoples.
Making tools depends on other tools to make them. And human hands and minds are the first tools we learnt to use. This is so educational and USEFUL. I'm always looking at "weeds" and plants and thinking, "how else could they be used, apart from mulch?" I live in a different country with different natural resources, but it seems so short-sighted not to recognize how practical our ancestors were. Those little bits of waste bast would have been used as 'fire starters' for sure.
This is brilliant. I know you need to do the academic write up, but I'd also love to see a small (or may not small) book on how to make and use all the tools, aimed at re-enactors and hobbyists. Regardless, I love your videos!
It is on the plan for after the MSc is finished!
@@SallyPointer 🎉🎉🎉 I will be all over that!
@@SallyPointer oh, excellent! Seems like the majority of your tech is oriented toward textiles, and your textiles toward apparel. I'm a forager, and it would be interesting to know if there are any ancient versions of sieves made using the same materials? I sift acorn flour for fineness, sift cattail pollen to remove (or reduce) the fibrous parts of the anthers, and sift seeds out of chaff Might that have been a part of neolithic processing, too?
It's honestly almost shocking how well that tool shredded your lime bast, and you're right, that upper e-wrap looked and worked FANTASTIC! Can't wait to see what else you're making, Sally!
I'm so relieved to see that, by the end of the video, and obviously through extensive consultation with your colleagues, you've determined the proper use of such a tool, as demonstrated in the final 30 seconds.
😸
Man, I'd love to see you at an event, but I'm stuck in America... I'm very surprised that these tools survived so long, given they're just thorns and a bit of cordage. Such a simple tool but such a big effect; human tool use has really just been one big long history of optimizing production, because making things from scratch takes a lot of time, and I think that's lost on most modern people with modern tools and easy access to shops. It wasn't until I started trying to make some of my own stuff that I realized how VALUABLE even mundane things like a bundle of thorns would have been.
We need to do an equivalent type of gathering here in the states. Im in Northern California.
Exactly so, nothing is really "disposable," yet our culture is centered around the idea that nearly everything is disposable. I've taken a lot of time in the last decade learning how to make all sorts of things that other people would buy, fixing things that others would throw away. Soles worn out on work boots? I have a scrap of tire, maybe that could be cut to fit. Found a broken off head of a hoe--hey, maybe I can make a chopping knife with this! It seems far more normal to me to look at the world this way, and very weird to NOT look at things with an eye toward conserving every last bit of usefulness. With our long history of innate frugality, this current culture is the weird way of doing things.
@@paintedwings74 More than that, the current consumer culture is so, so wasteful and bad for the environment. It's destroying the world for the sake of more money lining the CEO's pockets. It's the reason I buy used/pre-owned or refurbished things when I can. One less thing in a landfill, saves me a few dollars too. I'm not amazing at fixing things but I'm getting better at it.
@@pogostix6097 Its even worse than that. It's not that the money is lining the pockets of the CEO's but all the consumers who believe they must live like kings and have kings things and kings money. We the people have chosen and allowed to be the culture of waste at the expense of wildlife and environments. We allow the corporate to ram through the latest and greatest must have thing only to have a greater newer and greater thing a few days later and the thing before can't be upgraded. Designed yet we keep demanding it. There are few people in the world who truly care about the environment or anything for that matter. Consume consume and consume more. Im hoping to go backwards from the main culture. I will push back. Those that were once environmental hippies are now those pushing for more and greater things and demanding you buy them or else face ridicule.
@@abittwisted you'd have to ask the local tribes. Though they might not remember what they used to do. Some do but some don't. As you know... horrible practices that are still happening to this day.
"side tracked by a soap project" lol that sounds VERY familiar. I'm currently spinning up a bag of alpaca fibre on my little Turkish spindle, that I've had for almost a year, to complete a project that I started with a totally different bag of alpaca...... sidetracked is my middle name lol. Lovely to see a new video, Sally :)
That’s a really neat and effective tool, and surely our ancestors would have found that “e-wrap” just as pleasing as we do. Looking forward to seeing the evolution of your Neolithic toolkit!
Your videos are always so interesting! Have you ever worked with swamp milkweed fiber? Asclepias incarnata. It's native to North America so you may not have it there. I recently discovered they have extremely strong, soft fibers that are really easy to work with. I collected the stalks after they sat all winter on the plant. It was almost like they retted themselves and the fibers peeled off super easily.
I imagine indigenous peoples here probably used it (they're definitely known to have used wild cotton, Apocynum canabium which is in the same family)
It's not one we have here, but it sounds a great one to get to know
Dogbane and "Indian hemp" are both in the same plant family, and have equally wonderful fibers. Dogbane, especially, has super strong and super SOFT fiber, and I tell you, if I had to wear wool or other coarser fibers, I'd be making dogbane into knickers to save myself from scratching!
I m pretty sure they were used. There are historical references to alternate fabrics fine and lustrous. Much was lost when Cortez brought his terminally ill interpreter wandering willy nilly through the center of now US. One would almost think it had been planned...
@@paintedwings74 I have been collecting dogbane stems from my yard for a couple years now, usually in late fall (leaving some for the critters to make nests with), but I haven't tried to ret them yet. Sometimes I play with bits of them anyhow, decorticating by hand and scraping the flakes of bark off with my fingernail. I've brushed some of it until it's broken down into its individual elementary fibers, which are short like cotton, and even spun a tiny bit. I have no plans or goals, I just think it's fascinating. I do wish the North American hemp fiber industry would take off - I want cottonized hemp to replace cotton for water reasons and climate reasons! But I do love to play with my dogbane! If you know of any resources (people, videos, websites, etc.), please share! I have found very little about dogbane fiber. It's all over my neighborhood and I resist the urge to steal it from my neighbors' yards every winter!
@@froggydoodle808 I think my research on how to process dogbane is long enough ago that I'd struggle to relocate it all, but I'll take a look through my favorites. What I discovered sounds like what you discovered. Trying to ret it is not particularly useful, since the fibers are strong, but not flax-long, and you end up with a better quality if you just work it out by the piece. It is a beautiful, cheery plant, so much so that I don't mind in the least that it's not willing to yield to our hypotheses of how to make it more workable!
I've discovered a patch of native hemp that I'm hoping to use a bit later this year. Such a great plant! Where I live used to be the hemp center of the nation, during WWII. What a loss and a waste, when that industry was shut down.
Nice work. Yup, that should work just fine heckling flax. I use my mini wool combs to heckle the small amount of flax I grow every year. So yeah, likely was a multipurpose tool. Be useful combing ends of wool locks for spinning & nalebinding joins… cleaning furs & suede, once broke in even long hair brushing. Sweet little tool.
When I saw the tool you were going to make, my first thought was that it would be very helpful with felting wool.
Thought at first it was a filting needle bundle. But that is a neat tool
thats what my first impression was as well
I thought the little credit card sized photography scale was so neat that I tracked down "Past Horizons - tools for archeologists UK" and ordered two of them 😂
So interesting! Thanks for sharing your research and experimentation with us Sally. It's always a fascinating watch.
The bonus cat footage was much appreciated :)
One of the things I learned as a child with long hair, is that you start brushing out a tangle right near the ends - get that cleared, and then brush from a little higher up, and a little higher up, until you've moved all the way up to the scalp. I think you would get less breakage and tow from your raw materials if you treated combing them into fibres the same way.
Thats what I do too, it might not show up easily on these quickly filmed elements, but I definitely agree
I think it's wonderful that you and your colleagues are sharing your research with the public, both online and off. You make it so accessible and friendly.
That is ingenious! The first thing I thought of once you began showing how to use that on the lime bast was - what might it do for wool? The sole time I've ever handled any tool even a LITTLE like that was when our class (primary school kids, in western Texas) was shown how to card wool with the sort of tools the Navajo people use. (Which if you can't tell, was a VERY impactful day of learning, because I can even recall how my hands smelled after, and I'm in my 40s now!)
I made my first attempt at sourcing and making some cordage from plants growing right around me, but it did not work out; the plants I chose didn't behave at all in helpful ways, heh. But I did learn a lot about what to look for, and these plants are - well I'm not sure WHAT they are, the local colloquial name is "hedge-bush" which as I'm sure you can understand is the least accurate thing ever. Some sort of fast growing shrub, but since it had very straight stems and looked quite a lot like the nettles you've used in past videos, I thought it might work. Nope! Got all brittle and powdery. However I do know we have some type of cane or bamboo around here too, invasive stuff that no one will mind me taking as much as I want. And that DOES split into halves, so presumably if I do it right, that can be made to split much finer. I'm just waiting for the right time, when it has NOT been raining buckets every afternoon, to go out and grab some!
Are you still in Texas, Beryllahawk? I could probably make some suggestions on plants you could use for fibers, if that's where you live now. I don't know what your local cane is, if it's phragmites or bamboo or even a native river canebrake (that was good stuff but is now mostly endangered).
@@paintedwings74 I am in Mississippi now actually! I didn't know Canebrake was a plant! There's a big fancy subdivision on the west side of my city named that, but I had no idea where they got the name from. Given how rampant the "cane poles" are, I doubt they are canebrake specifically. I have never heard of phragmites but I'm definitely going to look into that. Thank you for this!
I'm officially a Sally Pointer fan boy! Love her work in the neolithic domain. Great to have someone so diligently experimenting.
Dear Sally, I love watching your videos cause I love those ancestry tools and how they improved their lives.
I think, this thorn-tool you can also use to brush human hair (not only cats 🐱🙂)
Absolutely fascinating watch! I was thinking of how perhaps these thorns could be used in heckle of some kind, and then I see that paddle you showed at the end! Looking forward to when you discuss that in future. Glad too to see the cat very happy with the historical tool at the end there too
Wow! It seems so simple in hindsight but the results really ups the quality of the fiber work!
I'm in Southern Arizona so my available fibers aren't even close to most of what you show, yet through experiments after watching your videos I've found plants that are adequate (if not ideal) for cordage beyond the traditional plants used by the native Americas in the area. I'll have to find the right local equivalent to make a fiber comb the next time I'm foraging. Great video, Thanks!
Does yucca grow locally? If so I've read it has great fibers. I'm going to harvest some myself in late summer and try it out.
@@jennifergamble3272 yes I can get yuca about 10 miles from home. I use it for paint brushes too. I've been experimenting with making cordage from "weeds" that grow fast and are less desirable in the yard. (Like the invasive "pig weed" amaranth with the crazy sticker tops that no one can tell me if they are an edible variety.)
you got yucca fibers? i'm in new york and they are grown as an ornamental here and the fibers are very good you should try them
@CEO of plants I live in Montana and we have yucca growing wild on the prairie.
@@angelduncan9147 if you have amaranth, you have the edible variety. It's just a matter of figuring out whether or not it's worthwhile to sift out and winnow the seeds!!! The only difference that makes some amaranth preferred over others is the size of the seed, but what is called "pigweed" around me is a perfectly decent seed size, even though it wasn't bred to be a large seed.
I don’t think anyone could design a modern tool that would do a better job! Our ancestors were brilliant.🤗❤️🐝
I'm in the USA, and last year, I found the native thorny honeylocust trees growing somewhere. I've seen the ones planted in urban areas before, but they are a variety that doesn't have thorns, so I was very surprised to see the thorny one. The thorns are very long, and I had been wondering what they could be used for. They're not individual thorns like those blackthorns, but they have multiple thorns branching off of each other. It could potentially still be used somehow. I also had someone give me a small number of porcupine quills and I wondered what those could be used for. But they have a barbed texture, which might not work for this.
I sure like your demonstration of the cording technique. Very efficient.
I love the addition of all the references you include at the end! Can’t wait to see how this works with nettle.
Fascinating. When you used the tool the first time and it separated the tree stuff into such regular consistent ribbons I blinked in surprise at the tool's effectiveness. Thank you for sharing this.
All textile tools are really for scratching the cat 😊 love it ❤ thanks for your videos Sally, I’m going to try out some of these techniques to make my own fiber prep tools! I find it so fascinating what simple but highly effective tools we can make ourselves
I wish there were still communities of people living this way. Thank you for sharing your craft.
That’s fascinating!
Especially as I have a whole load of blackthorn that’s I’ve been looking to use on a craft project like this!!
Now to research how to ID, forage & prepare lime bast…. 😊
You might know it as basswood or linden if you live in the USA.
@@paintedwings74 Thank you 👍
Thank you for this! So fascinating.
Yes, I'm sure that the original use of this tool was to scratch a kitty, and, at some point, someone realized the tool could be used for .... other things!
oh my goodness I love these videos so much. They transport me to another time and place. Thank you for sharing them!
I love this. And I especially love the kitty at the end 😊
Your videos are amazing! I'm not sure how I found your channel (I'm a weaver), but I've been watching your channel for quite a while. Thank you!
This is amazing. The work you do to recreate and test out ancient tools is truly beautiful. Thank you for sharing this with us.
Brilliant ; so informative and comfortable to watch …. I’m looking forward to trying it on nettles.
That was awesome. I had no idea where this was going until the fibers were shredded. Oh my. Add that to my list of projects.
Always interesting Sally! I do believe we need to remember old ways of doing things.
Lovely. Valuing our commonality with our neolithic ancestors is certainly one of the tools that will help us address modern problems of imperialism and colonialism.
The consistency of your cordage is very satisfying to see. I need to keep honing my skills. :-)
So amazing how innovative they were and that tool works like a charm, cannot think of a modern tool doing better than that!
I didn't know such long thorns existed outside of the african savannah! If I ever encounter such things, I will be sure and remember how useful they are. Thorns here are either rose thorns, quarter inch spikes, or small raspberry type splinters to bedevil you for days.
See if you have hawthorn trees in your area, or black locust trees. Either one could provide strong, sharp thorns that are longer than rose thorns, if not quite so long as the thorns Sally Pointer has access to.
My son loved how you played on Mr Rogers. He would tell everyone that would listen about your music.
I personally see a multi-purpose tool here. As you demonstrated, an easy way to make fine fibres for cordage. I also see a Felting tool. It could be used to turn Protein Fibres into textile material, by repeatedly stabbing it into fibre bundles, for use as blankets, ground mats, Insulation, or even clothing. I'm not saying that the people of the time period were doing this, but it could have been used in such a manner. And it wouldn't be such a leap of the imagination to think they wouldn't have figured this out.
Thank you for sharing! This idea is a game changer. I was lead here by soap, now cordage making! Now to find the wool comb. Kia ora!
Fascinating. And I now know what to do with those wicked long thorns on my plum tree
NOW i shall collect the Thorns from Chickasaw Plum Trees as i Prune them back. Tree's Bark is Beautiful, always thought i should try to use it for something. *Thanks!*
I think I am going to cheer really hard, all the way over here on the West Coast near Seattle, when you finally get your degree! Also, thank you for using the sizing/color calibration card and keeping it in view!
I love your videos, Sally. I have tried several of the techniques you have demonstrated and this is definitely another I will do. I am going to try it on fleece. You are a wonderful advertisement for the Exeter MSc, I sat there watching thinking that’s it, end the job and sign up! Will you be giving talks on your findings when you have finished?
wow i love textiles and tools! it's also so cool to see that techniques i use regularly, like making cords and knots, were well in use long ago.
Oh, wow, I wish we had blackthorn hedges here. Neolithic tools and what can be made with them are fascinating.
brushes are really just useful for so many things outside of this textile processing application i imagine people were making and remaking these regularly
you are back I am so happy! will try splitting rubarb wi¨hen I have made a " thornsplitter" I know where to find the thorns too!!
Your introductions to early tools is wonderful and I am glad to have found your videos and thank you!
Brilliant ! Really interesting ! Thankyou 💐
Those longer thorns looks like they would make really good sewing awls.
Ooooooh I'm excited to see more of these tools!
First you make a simple tool, then when the saved time. Then you make something pleasing, because beauty is soothing; and innately human.
I could watch this woman all day!
no kidding, my husband just came home with a basketful of thornless honey locust (which apparently cast thorns occasionally?). was wondering what to do with them. timely!
What a treat on a cloudy Sunday afternoon!!A new video!
I absolutely love this video and immediately gathered the materials to make this thank you so much
Thank you for your work. Is there anyone else doing your type of work, showing detailed experimental archaeology on youtube? (like Dr. James Dilley does with flint work). Thanks again.
So very interesting. Thank you for sharing and making this video.
ooo...it's like a very portable hackle...i'm curious how it works on flax and nettle now.
So glad I happened to see your videos, very interesting.
I found this by chance and was so interested in the subject. Very informative. Tku
Thank you so much great video. You are an amazing teacher you make it so accessable 😊
That was surprisingly fascinating! I wish I had known about tge neolithic open day before now because that sounds like a brilliant day out.
Thanks for sharing. Really interesting tool. I wanted to make a flax hackle but the prices of nails are just crazy. Maybe the black thorn is the way to go 😍
Fascinating to see how well simple tools work so well! Thank you for sharing
this is insanely cool !!! it will never cease to amaze me just how ingenuitive humans are. good luck on your dissertation, and if the paper(s) you write are open access i'd be interested in reading them !!!
This is fascinating! I was watching this and thinking of more "modern" tools, and surprise! You showed some of the items I was thinking of toward the end. I'll look forward to the next one!. Thanks so much.
This is such a nifty thing to see in action, because the fiber combing principle is still such an integral part of textile making even now... That said, your statement about them actually being for scratching the cat is a theory that I think will be widely adopted by feline academics. 😂
I love your videos and someday would like to take your classes, bit hard since I am in California.
Outstanding!!!! Thank you.
i finally found thorns!! im not sure what tree it is, but some branches had been trimmed at a local park and i noticed the beautiful spikes! not as large as yours but im hoping they'll work
I’m largely ignorant of all the fiber types used at this point, but my first thought was that it could have been used as a felting tool for animal fibers. Would that have been a possibility that early on, using fibers that were found on the thorns as animals brushed against them maybe?
Needle felting is a very recent variant and relies on barbed needles. Even with the natural knobbly bits on thorns these won't work the same.
Thank you for sharing this information ,I have hawthorn here and will give it a try .
right now i'm trying to make some natural soap and i've been making some fibers (using more modenr tools ;) ) from nettle... and I love making such things. And I love that you're sharing your skills on youtube so other people can also try to make it. Keep going and show people how to relax by keeping contact with nature and making their own crafty natural things
that was delicious, thanks very much, sally👍🌱
Thank you❤
Excellent video!! Thanks for all your hard work.
you are indeed correct, scratching your cat is the main function of all brushes and combs :D
I find your tool making videos facinating. I wish I had half of your hand coordination.
Practice is what makes that coordination happen most of the time.
@@paintedwings74 I have cerebral palsy... I practice moving all the time.
@@catherineleslie-faye4302 thank you for giving me the time of day to explain that, and I apologize for making you explain. I'm disabled in a much more minor way, but I should have known better than to make this very ableist assumption.
Oh I’ve just discovered you and this is wonderful work ❤😊
That is one nifty little comb!
Just while watching this video, tried twining combed wool tops. It worked really well. Off now to collect brambles and nettles to twine also. Have a small exhibition on Saturday at the Ridgewood centre, Chipping Sodbury, South Gloucester with our Weaving, Spinning and Dyeing group. Thanks for all you inspirational videos, I have learnt a lot.
Always nice to see a little Welsh representation.
btw, the word (colour) 'Ddu' is pronounced like the English 'the' (vowel variation, the apple, the umbrella).
Very interesting, well done all around.
Thank you Sally!
Great video and very informative thank you for making it.
Thank you Sally! 👏
Fantastic. I will definetely make this tool.
Incidentally, our cordage making speed is about the same. Throughout the video I was making a fine cord from a yellow iris leaf, dried and soaked.
Thank you for sharing
I love this!!! I’d be super excited to go to one of the neolithic open days you mentioned, but I think they’re a bit far from home currently :( best of luck for the msc, and I’ll look forward to seeing more about the other tools!
Good job! Please make video about all these amazing tools at 18:42
Especially that spatula tool with thorns for carding a wool (sorry I don't know right English term and dictionary misunderstands me). My colleague artist uses same iron thing for felting and we are both fans of our Eneolithic archaeology so she would be really happy to see such reconstruction in work! I live in north Kazakhstan and there are lots of mounds of bronze age; few of them contained felt pieces around 4 thousand years old and it was a big find for ones who understand (others just need GOLD lol; they need to watch more of such reconstructing works to realize wonder of history evidences which looks like piece of rubbish at first sight)
There will be videos of all of these as I finish writing them up!
...That end scene there, all I could think was: Sally Pointer made, Freya's Son approved!
(...since as you know, all cats are Freya's children!)
I like yours videos so much Sally.... thanks for your charming way of teaching...!!!!
Gutted I didn't make it to Bryn Cellu Ddu this year. I first saw you there a few years ago and was knocked out by your demonstration of nalbinding and sprang.
Stunning work and so so interesting. Thank you so much. I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it.
Wonderful information, fascinating! More please!
This is fascinating. Thanks!