Re: [lace] museum exhibit - flour sacks

2005-04-28 Thread Alice Howell
At 08:31 PM 4/27/2005, you wrote:
At which museum is this being featured?  I saw some of them when I was at 
Stanford U touring the Hoover Tower.
Lorri
Sorry, I thought I put it in the story.  It's the Herbert Hoover childhood 
home in Newberg, Oregon.  The house has been made into the Herbert Hoover 
Museum.  I think the signs say Hoover House. It's not very exciting but 
does have furniture of the period. It's worth a visit occasionally.

Herbert came to Newberg as a kid and lived with his uncle's family for 
several years.

Alice in Oregon --  only two days to Oregon Country Lacemakers Meeting. 

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Re: [lace] museum exhibit - flour sacks

2005-04-27 Thread Roslyn Nials
Piecework, the magazine, had an article last fall I think aboutthe 
gratitude of  the Belgian people for the care that Pres. Hoover helped them 
when he was President.  The use of the flour sacks for quilts and other uses 
for small pieces of fabric.  We added wools so some could knit .  One of the 
ladies in the East realized that you can't get lace without thread so that 
was also included.
It wasnice to here something good about Hoover after all this time.
Roslyn
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Re: [lace] museum exhibit - flour sacks

2005-04-27 Thread Su Carter
Nifty! There's an exhibit on-line at his Presidential Library -

http://hoover.archives.gov/exhibits/collections/flour%20sacks/

What a treat - there's even a pair of bloomers ;-)

Su

Alice Howell  wrote:

 I just opened my paper and read about a display of flour sacks stitched for
 Presiden Hoover by people in Belgium years ago.  It's the 50th anniversary
 of the museum, and they are celebrating with this exhibit.  A few quotes
 and story summary from the full page article: follows.
 
 Framed, beautifully embroidered and painted cotton flour sacks are
 temporarily replacing the usual art on the walls of ... the boyhood home of
 Herbert Hoover.
 
 Several hunderd of the sacks were given to Hoover by Belgians in gratitiude
 for his work in providing famine relief to their country during World War I.
 
 The (relief) commission shipped nearly  700 million pounds of flour to
 Begium.  Over 14 million empty flour sacks were created by the famine
 relief.  (The commission) controlled where they went and what was done with
 them, for two reasons:  Fear that the good flour would be taken out and
 replaced with inferior flour, and since cotton wadding was used in
 munitions, they wanted to keep them out of the hand of the enemy.  They
 accountd for every single one of them.
 
 The sacks were distributed to professional schools, convents, artists and
 public sewing workrooms.  They were used for clothing and to make a wide
 variety of items..
 
 Women embroidered, stenciled or painted (several hundred) sacks, sometimes
 using threads from their own clothing, or sewing in swathes of Belgium
 lace. One of the sacks on display is embellished with a delicate white lace
 swatch and white embroidery.
 
 -
 
 Now...I MUST go see this exhibit, on only for one month, and see just how
 many have lace on them, what kind, etc etc.  Anyone else who is in the
 Newberg, Oregon area during May might stop by.  They're open 1-4 Wed
 through Sunday.  Signs on the highway point to the turn.  It's a block off
 the main highway.  It's been several years since I stopped by, so now is
 the time.
 
 Happy lacing,
 Alice in Oregon -- whose Beds fan is 25 percent done.
 
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Re: [lace] museum exhibit - flour sacks

2005-04-27 Thread Lorri Ferguson
At which museum is this being featured?  I saw some of them when I was at
Stanford U touring the Hoover Tower.
Lorri
  - Original Message -
  From: Alice Howellmailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: lace@arachne.commailto:lace@arachne.com
  Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2005 8:23 PM
  Subject: [lace] museum exhibit - flour sacks


  I just opened my paper and read about a display of flour sacks stitched for
  Presiden Hoover by people in Belgium years ago.  It's the 50th anniversary
  of the museum, and they are celebrating with this exhibit.  A few quotes
  and story summary from the full page article: follows.

  Framed, beautifully embroidered and painted cotton flour sacks are
  temporarily replacing the usual art on the walls of ... the boyhood home of
  Herbert Hoover.

  Several hunderd of the sacks were given to Hoover by Belgians in gratitiude
  for his work in providing famine relief to their country during World War
I.

  The (relief) commission shipped nearly  700 million pounds of flour to
  Begium.  Over 14 million empty flour sacks were created by the famine
  relief.  (The commission) controlled where they went and what was done with
  them, for two reasons:  Fear that the good flour would be taken out and
  replaced with inferior flour, and since cotton wadding was used in
  munitions, they wanted to keep them out of the hand of the enemy.  They
  accountd for every single one of them.

  The sacks were distributed to professional schools, convents, artists and
  public sewing workrooms.  They were used for clothing and to make a wide
  variety of items..

  Women embroidered, stenciled or painted (several hundred) sacks, sometimes
  using threads from their own clothing, or sewing in swathes of Belgium
  lace. One of the sacks on display is embellished with a delicate white lace
  swatch and white embroidery.

  -

  Now...I MUST go see this exhibit, on only for one month, and see just how
  many have lace on them, what kind, etc etc.  Anyone else who is in the
  Newberg, Oregon area during May might stop by.  They're open 1-4 Wed
  through Sunday.  Signs on the highway point to the turn.  It's a block off
  the main highway.  It's been several years since I stopped by, so now is
  the time.

  Happy lacing,
  Alice in Oregon -- whose Beds fan is 25 percent done.

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