Tuesday 18 September 2007

























This week I will mostly be.....imagining what a Tasmanian Inland Rural Tribe's 'traditional national costume' might look like.

"This example dates from between 1890 to 1930 and we can see the predominance of red as a colour representing festivities, fertility and the advent of spring within the community. This particular costume was worn during the Lamington Tea Ritual, a highlight on the Tasmanian rural calendar of the Northern-Midlands communities. The costume features a traditional tea cosy headdress with brass wire tea strainer, which indicates the wearer's marital status, in this instance the wearer is unmarried. The tea strainer this young woman wears, I am told, originates from France, and would have been passed down through the woman's female line as a treasured heirloom. Also indicating wealth and status within the community, the tea cosy-tea strainer headdresses are either inherited and/or altered or newly made using traditional patterning and stitching techniques. This young woman had made her tea cosy headdress according to the traditions of her female line and had added individual touches with the use of multi-coloured decorative embroidery stitches. Examples of these tea cosy headdresses are highly collectible and sere to denote cultural occupation areas and collective immigrant communities throughout Tasmania's 'Europeanised' history."

Monday 3 September 2007

Teacosy* High Fashion Parade

Susannah Curtis is magnificent in red velvet dress and 'Teacosy* Number 4; Modena Cosy', 2006, both by Tara Badcock.
Photographed by Alan Moyle (www.photobat.net), at Calstock Private Hotel in
Deloraine (www.Peppers.com.au/Deloraine). This image form part of the Teacosy* Revolution Manifesto publication which awaits publication, hopefully set for summer 2007.
Publication dates will be posted on this site, so stay tuned!