temporaryreality: (Default)
 I forgot to mention yet another ongoing project that I'll add to my updates when those come around.

I've decided to learn to sew my own clothes.

I'm trying to think back to what spurred it and I think somewhere mid-lockdown I went to the big box store to see if they had some 100% cotton camisoles that I used to get from the girls' department. The XL fit me and the tops are useful summer pajama tops or for layering under shirts. They're a little short, but they mostly work for what I want.
Turns out though, that they're not longer made in 100% cotton.
  • So much for that.
Also, 
  • I hate shopping.
And, 
  • I pretty much find I don't particularly care for the clothes I DO find when I shop
Admittedly that's mostly at thrift stores, but that's because I hate shopping and I don't like the clothes anyway, mostly (self-reinforcing circle, amirite?).

And then
  • I was spending too much time online, frittering time away and doing nothing productive.
  • Meanwhile despondent at the lack of beauty in the modern world.
To be honest, I wish I could build a house as part of a neighborhood, with a community in a small, similarly-built town, in a place that wasn't a blight on the land, but I'm middle-aged, unskilled, and not in any place or situation to do such a thing.

But why give up?

Oddly enough, the epiphany hit while I was online, but at least it spurred me to recognize what I was doing (simulacra of life, not living). I saw a delightful YouTube video by Elin Abrahamsson in which she makes a Medieval kirtle, and I realized that I should just do what I can.

I stopped being online in the evenings, got out my needles and thread and fabric and found some basic, beginner patterns, and I've been making clothes.

So far, I've made a linen tank top, a pair of pants styled from the traditional Japanese field-pants called monpei, and attempted a mock-up for a pair of shorts. I'm not satisfied with how the shorts turned out, so it's on hold (and anyway, the weather is turning). I also made a pair of basic leather sandals, following this tutorial.

I intend to make a linen shift and maybe eventually make a kirtle or kirtle-like dress, and turnshoes are on my to-do list too. 

I'm going to work on improving my sewing skill and technique, and to work my way into eventual wardrobe replacement. It'll be a long process (like everything I do, it seems!).

temporaryreality: (Default)
That I read an article and didn't get certain literary references, that I don't know how to assess others' logic in an argument, that I'm always reminded of the many classics I haven't read and the somewhat chaotic "lump" of history that surfaces in my mind when I wish to understand developments, causes, and correlates for things happening today certainly got me thinking of (my) education...

As did the approaching birthday (they're just not producing time like they used to!)...

And too, there was my decision to taper down the amount of time I spend online, whether on my phone or my computer, the ever-growing list of books that I could conceivably read, and even a quiet desire to learn to hand sew (a skill reminiscent of another neglected aspect of education) that culminated in a purchase of linen and the starting of a basic tank top.

But I think what kickstarted this was my having taken the first direct* step toward invoking Gods into my daily Sphere of Protection. For east and the element Air, I chose Athena.

I pored over her epithets, chose two that resonated with the direction and its correspondences, noted with interest Athena Ergane - her aspect as patroness of handicrafts and the connection with the making of clothing,** and Polyvoulous - indicating her wise counsel, and I decided on the wording I'd use. After the first or second day, I was out in the garden, looking at the flowers, and thinking about offerings. I thought, "Hmm, what would be a good offering for Athena?" There was a pause and then the image of a book flashed into my mind: small, blank pages, bound in brown leather.

"She'd like me to make a book," I thought. "Ok, I can do that."

So I did. I've made books before, though never one this small. I didn't have the brown leather I saw in the image, but I found something very nice. It took a few days to make and the day I finished it I cut a small branch from one of my olive trees, and in the mail there was a little promotional calendar with an appropriate image.

All three went on a shelf that's going to be a "revolving" altar (for whichever deity I feel moved to honor), and when I finish the tank top, it'll go there too.

At this point it became apparent that it was time to take a look at The Well-Trained Mind, which had been awaiting its opportunity for about two years.

So here we are.

-----
*The very first step was indirect in that it entailed simply a naming of two Gods and two Goddesses for the Elemental Cross. I'd been doing that for several months.

**From Wikipedia: Athena Ergane was the goddess of spinning and weaving, and so every year at the Chalkeia, on the day of the festival, the priestesses of Athena Polias and the young arrephoroi would ritualistically set up a loom to make a sacred peplos to be offered to the goddess.On this loom, the enormous peplos was woven by women volunteers, the Ergastinai (meaning “female weavers”), who were either virgin girls of marriageable age or older matrons. Every year the peplos was woven by the Ergastinai under the supervision of a priestess of the Athena's cult. When the work at the loom began, the arrephoroi wore white robes, and were present to offer their perceived sacredness.

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