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Golden Thread: How Fabric Changed History
Golden Thread: How Fabric Changed History | Kassia St Clair
12 posts | 6 read | 1 reading | 20 to read
From colorful 30,000-year-old threads found on the floor of a Georgian cave to the Indian calicoes that sparked the Industrial Revolution, The Golden Thread weaves an illuminating story of human ingenuity. Design journalist Kassia St. Clair guides us through the technological advancements and cultural customs that would redefi ne human civilization--from the fabric that allowed mankind to achieve extraordinary things (traverse the oceans and shatter athletic records) and survive in unlikely places (outer space and the South Pole). She peoples her story with a motley cast of characters, including Xiling, the ancient Chinese empress credited with inventing silk, to Richard the Lionhearted and Bing Crosby. Offering insights into the economic and social dimensions of clothmaking--and countering the enduring, often demeaning, association of textiles as "merely women's work"--The Golden Thread offers an alternative guide to our past, present, and future.
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Lindy
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Charlotte Cooper, the British gold medalist in both the tennis singles and mixed doubles at the Paris Olympics in 1900, played in a tight-fitting, ankle-length skirt, a blouse buttoned up to her neck and down to her wrists, a corset and heeled shoes.

Suet624 Oof 2mo
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jenniferw88
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mabell Cool cover! 2y
CrowCAH This would be interesting. And it kinda works for North and South too! 2y
74 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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mrsmarch
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#bookspin for November! Some October holdovers and a backlog of cozy mysteries.

TheAromaofBooks Yay!!! 2y
Drnkpnkprincess It‘s been sitting on my shelf forever so thank you for reminding me I need to read 2y
ValerieAndBooks Ooh, I have been curious about Elliott Pattison‘s mysteries. Look forward to what you think. And I saw the Robert E Lee and me book at my son‘s college bookstore— the author is an alumni. But we were already spending too much by simply being there for Parents Weekend. So I look forward to your thoughts on that one, too. 2y
See All 6 Comments
ValerieAndBooks And yes, I know the Phillis Wheatley is a DAR book. Will get to that one eventually. I‘m currently reading the Pocahontas one but it is very slow going for me. 2y
mrsmarch @ValerieAndBooks That makes me sad about the Pocahontas one being a slow read. I had been excited about it. 2y
ValerieAndBooks @mrsmarch There is just so much information packed into it. It‘s not just about the story of Pocahontas herself also but the history of her times and also that of Native American stories and mythology. So there‘s a lot to absorb (edited) 2y
26 likes6 comments
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mrsmarch
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Modest points this week but I‘ve been dead busy. 452 total for 4 hours of reading, 1 spooky show (the Halloween episode of Jessie, “The Whining”), 260 game points, wrapping up Toucan Keep a Secret, reading the Little Golden Book “The Haunted Mansion” to the little, and 2 participation points. Tomorrow I am getting on a plane headed to NC and VA!

#TeamSlaughter Week 2 = 452 points 🎃 👻 🔪 🦜

Texreader Amen!! 2y
Clwojick Woohoo! 🖤 2y
29 likes2 comments
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BookishMarginalia
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Looks right up my alley! Well done, @WanderingBookaneer 💜💜💜

WanderingBookaneer I try my best, wife. 3y
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BookishMarginalia
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@WanderingBookaneer came home from her #indie visit with some gifts for me! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼

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bookandbedandtea
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1- tagged book plus The River, Paper and Ink, and a fair dose of fanfiction 😆
2- Disappearing Earth, The Family Upstairs, American Sherlock
3- sort of: our sweet old lady died a month ago but my son lives here with his giant doggo
#weekendreads @rachelsbrittain

rachelsbrittain So sorry to hear about your loss but glad you still have a doggo in your life 4y
20 likes1 comment
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bookandbedandtea
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Starting this tonight. 🤩

Aimeesue That sounds strangely fascinating! 4y
bookandbedandtea @Aimeesue It truly is! (Well, the first couple chapters have been) 4y
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bookandbedandtea
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Got myself a Christmas present while I was shopping. That's how it works, right?! 😁

marleed Right! 4y
bookandbedandtea @marleed Thanks for the validation! 😉💜 4y
19 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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iread2much
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Mehso-so

This book started strong, got bogged down in the middle and fizzled at the end. It felt like the author starts with a history of cloth and ends with commentary on sports. I wanted more about the history and development of synthetic fibers and less than on random history of specific products. I give this a 2/5 stars

LeahBergen Your dogs are so cute. 😍 4y
iread2much @LeahBergen thanks so much 😄 4y
9 likes2 comments
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shanaqui
Pickpick

Hmm, I didn't pick up her previous book since I thought it seemed to glance off the surface too much, from a brief flip through it in Waterstones. Now I wish I had picked it up, if it's like this one -- just the right degree of breadth vs depth, and very easy to read too. Thing I didn't know: Viking sails were made of wool.

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cachoo
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Learnt so much about textile history from this book and loved every minute of it.