When I get the rare chance to meet a person who is a master of their craft, it can propel my own creativity in unexpected directions.
Early this month, while teaching at a TAFTA (The Australian Forum for Textile Arts) event in Orange, NSW I met Makiko Tada, one of the world's leading practitioners of the ancient Japanese craft known as Kumihimo - literally, "gathering of threads", or braiding. Some of its many uses over the centuries have been for samurai armor and kimono accessories. But Tada has taken the traditiional techniques, passed down from her mother, and created wildly experimental kumihimo. Her engineering background enabled her to design a machine for making an incredibly strong braid. When covered in carbon fiber the braid won't fatigue like metal, so in some situations will outlast metal components! The video showing this machine in operation has got to be seen to be believed - it's completely mesmerising and I could watch it on a loop all day:
But I digress.
Back in Orange, Makiko tossed me one of the small round high-density foam disks she has developed as a modern portable 'marudai' for making kumihimo, and after some quick instruction, I was seriously - no, seriously - hooked.
Below are some images of my early experiments with this technique. It's a steep slope to become competent at it, but I have been logging many hours at the little disks and plates, braiding away, learning as I go. They'll surely work their way into my jewelry in the coming months.
A tiny braid of perle cotton, attached to a 150 year old pocket watch key part.
The square plate is used primarily for making flat braids.
Slow, magic, satisfying work.
Now to see some REAL kumihimo, check out Makiko Tada's blog:
http://makikokumihimo.posterous.com/
Next week, I'll take you back, at long last, into the studio to see another new interest taking form.
Ciao!
Keith