Fibre, Tools & Textiles: Fashioning the Viking Age 1

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportRapportForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Fibre, Tools & Textiles : Fashioning the Viking Age 1. / Andersson Strand, Eva; Demant, Ida.

1 udg. Copenhagen : National Museum of Denmark, 2023. 104 s.

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportRapportForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Andersson Strand, E & Demant, I 2023, Fibre, Tools & Textiles: Fashioning the Viking Age 1. bind 1, 1 udg, National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen.

APA

Andersson Strand, E., & Demant, I. (2023). Fibre, Tools & Textiles: Fashioning the Viking Age 1. (1 udg.) National Museum of Denmark.

Vancouver

Andersson Strand E, Demant I. Fibre, Tools & Textiles: Fashioning the Viking Age 1. 1 udg. Copenhagen: National Museum of Denmark, 2023. 104 s.

Author

Andersson Strand, Eva ; Demant, Ida. / Fibre, Tools & Textiles : Fashioning the Viking Age 1. 1 udg. Copenhagen : National Museum of Denmark, 2023. 104 s.

Bibtex

@book{7acd1cb5a567463997fdcb711a90028f,
title = "Fibre, Tools & Textiles: Fashioning the Viking Age 1",
abstract = "Project Part 1, Viking Age Textile Production, in the Fashioning the Viking Age project focused on the reconstruction of textile tools which were subsequently used to produce replicas of known, archaeological textile finds from Hedeby in Northern Germany. These textiles come in many different qualities, and it is exactly this variation that the first part of the project aimed to explore. The present report documents the reconstruction process based on the analyses of the selected archaeological finds as well as the decisions and data relevant to produce tools and textiles. The process took almost two years, and besides the core project members, it involved several researchers with different skills, and craftspeople, whose invaluable knowledge and commitment has contributed to the finished result.The aim of Project Part 1 was thus to make Viking Age textile production visible and tactile for a modern audience. As many archaeological textiles are often small, poorly preserved and visually far from their original appearance, they can be hard for non-textile experts to understand and decode. Further, many published archaeological textiles are not supplemented with photos, which makes visual identification even more difficult. Altogether, we lacked well-presented and visually understandable archaeological textile data that can be used for outreach and educational purposes.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, Viking Age, Textiles, Production, Textile tools, Experimental archaeology, Textile Craft",
author = "{Andersson Strand}, Eva and Ida Demant",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
isbn = "8776023788",
volume = "1",
publisher = "National Museum of Denmark",
edition = "1",

}

RIS

TY - RPRT

T1 - Fibre, Tools & Textiles

T2 - Fashioning the Viking Age 1

AU - Andersson Strand, Eva

AU - Demant, Ida

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Project Part 1, Viking Age Textile Production, in the Fashioning the Viking Age project focused on the reconstruction of textile tools which were subsequently used to produce replicas of known, archaeological textile finds from Hedeby in Northern Germany. These textiles come in many different qualities, and it is exactly this variation that the first part of the project aimed to explore. The present report documents the reconstruction process based on the analyses of the selected archaeological finds as well as the decisions and data relevant to produce tools and textiles. The process took almost two years, and besides the core project members, it involved several researchers with different skills, and craftspeople, whose invaluable knowledge and commitment has contributed to the finished result.The aim of Project Part 1 was thus to make Viking Age textile production visible and tactile for a modern audience. As many archaeological textiles are often small, poorly preserved and visually far from their original appearance, they can be hard for non-textile experts to understand and decode. Further, many published archaeological textiles are not supplemented with photos, which makes visual identification even more difficult. Altogether, we lacked well-presented and visually understandable archaeological textile data that can be used for outreach and educational purposes.

AB - Project Part 1, Viking Age Textile Production, in the Fashioning the Viking Age project focused on the reconstruction of textile tools which were subsequently used to produce replicas of known, archaeological textile finds from Hedeby in Northern Germany. These textiles come in many different qualities, and it is exactly this variation that the first part of the project aimed to explore. The present report documents the reconstruction process based on the analyses of the selected archaeological finds as well as the decisions and data relevant to produce tools and textiles. The process took almost two years, and besides the core project members, it involved several researchers with different skills, and craftspeople, whose invaluable knowledge and commitment has contributed to the finished result.The aim of Project Part 1 was thus to make Viking Age textile production visible and tactile for a modern audience. As many archaeological textiles are often small, poorly preserved and visually far from their original appearance, they can be hard for non-textile experts to understand and decode. Further, many published archaeological textiles are not supplemented with photos, which makes visual identification even more difficult. Altogether, we lacked well-presented and visually understandable archaeological textile data that can be used for outreach and educational purposes.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - Viking Age

KW - Textiles

KW - Production

KW - Textile tools

KW - Experimental archaeology

KW - Textile Craft

M3 - Report

SN - 8776023788

VL - 1

BT - Fibre, Tools & Textiles

PB - National Museum of Denmark

CY - Copenhagen

ER -

ID: 362842387