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Cotton Memories

Knitting, crocheting, tatting, embroidery, even Turkish oya-making; cotton is the supreme material for fashion and household goods.

Piecework Editorial Staff Jun 22, 2015 - 3 min read

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When I was only three years old and living in southwestern Oklahoma, cotton was the major agricultural crop. This was during World War II, and housewives, school children, even prisoners of war who were interned in our small town, were all recruited to bring in the crop. It was hot, sweaty work for my ten-year-old brother, who could pick forty pounds a day. Better than sitting in school! I loved playing with the stray boll--picking it apart, making little nests for ladybugs and wigs for clothespin dolls.

This filet crochet design is simply gorgeous! Learn how to make your own vintage tablecloth!

This filet-crochet tablecloth is at the center of Katherine Durack’s article, “Letters from the Asylum.”
Photos by Donald Scott.

We took cotton for granted. My flour-sack dresses and Sunday School batiste pinafores, my baby brother’s diapers, our dad’s khaki work pants, the chenille bedspreads with their cunning little tufts--all 100 percent cotton. It was our world.

Detail of a doily made in Cluny tatting. Complete instructions for making the doily are included in the July/August 2015 issue of PieceWork.

Detail of a doily made in Cluny tatting. Complete instructions for making the doily are included in the July/August 2015 issue of PieceWork.

A scarf from Turkey with traditional oya edging from the collection of Cynthia LeCount Samaké.

A scarf from Turkey with traditional oya edging from the collection of Cynthia LeCount Samaké.

I was much, much older before I realized how truly vast the world of cotton is. I’ve seen it growing in India, Egypt, Central and South America. I’ve even seen it growing in the Galapagos Islands--a special native variety called Darwin’s cotton with very small light tan bolls. I’ve seen Monsanto GMO cotton and wild Mexican tree cotton and Louisiana brown cotton. Cotton has a fraught history: driving slavery, depleting the soil, causing wars, justifying child labor. But it’s also been the stuff of great beauty and comfort, of economic development and global trade. Pulling together its diverse threads made for an editorial challenge and a reader’s delight in the July/August 2015 issue of PieceWork. My favorite story is “Letters from the Asylum”--and yes, the title is accurate. So human, so poignant. Of course, there’s much more--deep history, projects to make that are both sturdy and delicate. Knitting, crocheting, tatting, embroidery, even Turkish oya-making; cotton is the supreme material for fashion and household goods.

Linda

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