For some reason we think of previous generations as more primitive. They had skills and they turned out useful items from natural resources that were at hand. The stakes were higher, fail to keep a fire going anc one could get sik and die. They had to be more skilled than us to just survive.
Thank you for posting this! I don't know if I'm going to find the spare time to pick up sprang as a new craft but watching you teach it was very interesting
Awesome - thank you for sharing!!!! My family uses a very similar technique to make something called “Jalba”, which is a cap that went with a type of headgear which was a status symbol for married women that people in my mother’s village (near Trg, along the Kupa River in Croatia) made until about WWI & have recently tried to revive at an ethnographic workshop in Ozalj. I would love to try this! My relatives use a frame shaped like a bow at the top. It is really cool to see that old cap and find similarities to the jalba!
I would love to see more of your work. I was gifted a sprang loom a couple of months ago and now have time to work on it. Thanks for explaining the safety thread and such. Very easy to follow your instructions.
Que bacana esta professora! Gostei muito, voce explica tão bem e usa um tear manual mesmo, como era antigamente! Tem tear atual que é muito sofisticado e que a gente não pode fazer em casa. Este aí é super simples, como eram os bem antigos. Obrigada a voce e ao Arnold!
For some reason we think of previous generations as more primitive. They had skills and they turned out useful items from natural resources that were at hand. The stakes were higher, fail to keep a fire going anc one could get sik and die. They had to be more skilled than us to just survive.
Thank you for posting this! I don't know if I'm going to find the spare time to pick up sprang as a new craft but watching you teach it was very interesting
Very clearly demonstrated.
sprang looked easy but gave me a hard time trying it....
I had tried sprang about 15 years ago, but didn't have the safety line... I think I would have had better luck...
Thank you. You r the first video if found that teaches how to start one
I'm attempting to be one of those who recue old craft techniques in Norway. What would be the best way to learn Sprang?
the heavy breathing
Awesome - thank you for sharing!!!!
My family uses a very similar technique to make something called “Jalba”, which is a cap that went with a type of headgear which was a status symbol for married women that people in my mother’s village (near Trg, along the Kupa River in Croatia) made until about WWI & have recently tried to revive at an ethnographic workshop in Ozalj. I would love to try this! My relatives use a frame shaped like a bow at the top. It is really cool to see that old cap and find similarities to the jalba!
I would love to see more of your work. I was gifted a sprang loom a couple of months ago and now have time to work on it. Thanks for explaining the safety thread and such. Very easy to follow your instructions.
Thank you for sharing this! Let's keep these techniques alive.
filmed by Darth Vader
A little less extinct now. I want to try my hand at this :-)
You are a very good instructor!
Very interesting and well explained !!! I just wonder, what will happen when a thread brakes, will everything come undone?
Is recording Dark Vader?
Que bacana esta professora! Gostei muito, voce explica tão bem e usa um tear manual mesmo, como era antigamente! Tem tear atual que é muito sofisticado e que a gente não pode fazer em casa. Este aí é super simples, como eram os bem antigos. Obrigada a voce e ao Arnold!
This is great! Thank you so much. I actually feel confident in having a go.
Enjoyed my first turorial, will definitely watch the rest!
You doing a nice job explaining,
soon as i have more time im gonna try it
Love your work! thanks for sharing!
How do you end sprang?
Thanks apke batane ka tarika bahut hi Acha hai
Thank you for the excellent instructions.
Thank you so much for that video !
awsome
.