Carpets by Alexandra Kehayoglou
These carpets are made from wool, often from the leftovers of the production of other products in the factory, carrying a strong message of sustainability.
(via toteardown)
Textile Fragment with Inhabited Vine in an Eight-Pointed Star
Date : 5th–6th century
Geography : Made in Byzantine Egypt
Culture : Coptic
Medium : Linen, wool
Dimensions : Overall : 10 5/8 x 12 1/2 in. (27 x 31.8 cm)Album Size : just under 26 in x just under 20 in. (some slightly smaller).
Classification : Textiles
East Africa. 1985.
Knitted wool yarn and twigs, and oil on gelatin silver print. Overall 66 in. x 8 ft. 10 in. (167.6 x 269.2 cm)
(via textilesystematisms)
Star Wars Felt Crib Mobile by Andrea Burnett
Available for purchase at etsy. It features a Naboo Starfighter, Tie Fighter, X-Wing, Millennium Falcon, Star Destroyer, Republic Attack Gunship, 8 orange and white planets and 1 Death Star.
(via: technabob / Tie Fighters)
(via herp-derpherpderpian)
The Yalta Conference Cloak
The photos of the Big Three at the Yalta Conference are well-known, but have you ever looked closely at what FDR was wearing?
In contrast to the double-breasted coats worn by Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin, Franklin D. Roosevelt wore a distinctive wool and velvet cloak during his trip to the Crimea, Ukraine, in February 1945.
The garment is a U.S. Navy regulation officer’s boatcloak. President Roosevelt’s was made at the Naval Clothing Depot at the Brooklyn Navy Yard in New York City in August 1942. It is a standard officer’s boatcloak, ordered and unaltered for FDR’s use.
The cloak is designed to be worn during movement by a boat to protect the wearer from the cold and his clothing from the effects of spray. It opens at the front and is fitted with two frogs (knotted lengths of braided cord), which engage to secure the cloak closed. The relative ease with which such a cloak could be put on and taken off made wearing it an attractive alternative to a more conventional garment—especially for someone whose ease of movement was hampered by the effects of polio.
Roosevelt wore similar boatcloaks during other trips he made during his Presidency. The image of FDR in these cloaks is one of the most enduring of the war years.
-from the FDR Library
(via thepalmtoptigerr)