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Monday, January 28, 2013

playing bill bailey's wife


i'll do the cooking honey, i'll pay the rent......

cajoling an architect into believing that drafting a clothes pattern is the same as drafting a house plan.


top
the image i wanted him to draft,
never mind the sulking  model













fell in love with it and thought this fabric would  work well. actually, it's  a take on a kosode, don't you think?

pattern
i finally got husband san to draft the schematic pattern. he still doesn't see it and keeps wondering how i'll get the back. gave him the shoulder measurement  and what i think i need to do now is scale that to my measurements re shaping it. the kamikaze seamstress strikes again.
sewing people ideas most welcome! 

weaving the ai-kakishibu yardage progressing happily


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Thursday, January 24, 2013

knit knit who's there?





my pal rubi is organizing a knit along.wanna join? just for fun.





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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

fudge factor, knowledge transfer and less is more




a mouthful of a title indeed! but it's where i am at now.
first fudging. i was getting some bad lifts with my dobby loom thus slowing me down.
fudging around with the cords didn't help and i had to manually push the lift knife back. not very efficient.  so i tried the less is more axiom which meant loosening the cords. voila! the knife returned to the optimal position by itself, no hand helping.

now on  for knowledge transfer:
 starting with  polanyi  and his theories on tacit knowledge:


 Tacit knowledge comprises a range of conceptual and sensory information and images that can be brought to bear in an attempt to make sense of something (see Hodgkin 1991). Many bits of tacit knowledge can be brought together to help form a new model or theory...... 

 unwritten, unspoken and hidden; in other words, you know things you don't know you know or cannot articulate them.

......To hold such knowledge is an act deeply committed to the conviction that there is something there to be discovered. It is personal, in the sense of involving the personality of him who holds it, and also in the sense of being, as a rule, solitary; but there is no trace in it of self-indulgence. The discoverer is filled with a compelling sense of responsibility for the pursuit of a hidden truth, which demands his services for revealing it.

then looking into how knowledge transfer works. most examples and models deal with the economic world, but the principles are valid in other fields as well. the process is more or less described as this:

 idea creation, sharing, evaluation, dissemination, and adoption.


imagine where we'd be now if the first one who discovered fire had not transfered that knowledge?
fascinating topic!

lovely reads:
Richard Sennet: The craftsman

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