Rattan and vines are good materials for crafts like basketry due to their tough but pliant stems. Nito is a small twining vine used for decoration and structure. Rattan is a non-twining vine that grows on trees; smaller rattan is used for weaving while larger rattan is used for furniture. Philippine rattan is considered the finest in quality. Rattan parts are assembled using nails and splints for reinforcement. Embroidery was introduced to the Philippines by Europeans and the embroidery done there now rivals other countries for its excellence. A variety of tools are used for embroidery including needles, thread, scissors, and hoops.
Rattan and vines are good materials for crafts like basketry due to their tough but pliant stems. Nito is a small twining vine used for decoration and structure. Rattan is a non-twining vine that grows on trees; smaller rattan is used for weaving while larger rattan is used for furniture. Philippine rattan is considered the finest in quality. Rattan parts are assembled using nails and splints for reinforcement. Embroidery was introduced to the Philippines by Europeans and the embroidery done there now rivals other countries for its excellence. A variety of tools are used for embroidery including needles, thread, scissors, and hoops.
Rattan and vines are good materials for crafts like basketry due to their tough but pliant stems. Nito is a small twining vine used for decoration and structure. Rattan is a non-twining vine that grows on trees; smaller rattan is used for weaving while larger rattan is used for furniture. Philippine rattan is considered the finest in quality. Rattan parts are assembled using nails and splints for reinforcement. Embroidery was introduced to the Philippines by Europeans and the embroidery done there now rivals other countries for its excellence. A variety of tools are used for embroidery including needles, thread, scissors, and hoops.
Rattan and vines are good materials for crafts like basketry due to their tough but pliant stems. Nito is a small twining vine used for decoration and structure. Rattan is a non-twining vine that grows on trees; smaller rattan is used for weaving while larger rattan is used for furniture. Philippine rattan is considered the finest in quality. Rattan parts are assembled using nails and splints for reinforcement. Embroidery was introduced to the Philippines by Europeans and the embroidery done there now rivals other countries for its excellence. A variety of tools are used for embroidery including needles, thread, scissors, and hoops.
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MODULE 3:
RATTAN AND VINE
CRAFT, EMBROIDERY AND BASKETRY RATTAN AND VINE CRAFT KINDS OF VINE Vines are plants that lean, twine, or crawl. They cannot stand on their own since their stems are small and slender, and cannot carry their foliage without the support of a sturdy material. The stems of vines, however, are tough although pliant. The skin is strong while the inner core is fibrous. These different qualities of vines make them good materials for basketry, tiers or fences, corrals, and for light structure work as in roof construction of bamboo and nipa houses. Nito - is a twinning plant. When young, the stem is green which turns white, brown or black as it matures. As it grows, the leaves fall leaving a knotted mark. Occasionally it branches where the leaf grows. Nito is a small vine twining on shrubs or bushes. The diameter of the stem is approximately 2-4 mm and 1-5 m long. The outer part of the stem is splint with the inner side scraped, as a splint and used as tiers or weavers as well as decoration in weaves. It is hard when dry and pliant when fresh, or when soaked in water. Nito is actually a twining fern. Rattan - is a non-twining vine which grows slender leaning on tall trees. The trunk is from 15 cm in diameter with nodes where the leaf sheath was attached. The leaves resemble a palm with thorns or spines on the petiole. It grow from 5-20 meters long without branches except when the growing point is injured. Small rattan known as Sica is splinted into tiers or weavers. Its body is solid fiber and pulp with the inner weaker than the back. The layer close to the skin is the strong splint. Splints of shallow nodes are used in seat canning gauges to various sizes. The inner side is scraped to produce a thin and clean splint. Rattan splints of 3 m are bundled by hundreds and sold. Larger rattan known as Palasan are from 2-6 cm in diameter used in furniture making. Cuttings of 3 m or more are sold by the hundreds. Rattan stems do not have hollow and the strong part is close to the skin of fine fiber and pulp. The innermost part is course and weak. Removing the skin exposes the peel which is strong and shiny when polished. Rattan or oway is commonly found in tropical jungles of the Far East, but Philippine rattan is the finest rattan in the world. Deep and shady places in the Philippines forest is the best breeding places of rattan. This forest product will vanish unless conserved and cultures. The use exhausts faster the supply from the slow growth of the plant. Today supply of rattan comes from the remotest forest of Palawan and Mindanao. The supply from Negros and other part of the Philippine aiready exhausted. Cutting rattans- a bender is devised to bend rattan. Dry large size stems are hard to bend. Two pieces of wood or large iron pipe of 7.5 cm in diameter are bound together spaced between allowing the stem of rattan to be inserted. The point or part to be bent is heated with a blowtorch then bent to the desired bend of rounded corner. After the bend, they are tied to make the bend fixed when cooled off. Circular bend is done just the same moving the bend on the straight stem to the end using the stem as a lever. Brown or dark spots are scraped with a spokeshave to have a uniform white stern. Rattan of 2.5 cm or less in diameter is easier to bend even without heating. •Assembling rattan parts- pieces of furniture made of rattan are assembled by nailing using the common butt joint. A 5-7.5 cm finishing nail is used. The joint is wrapped with rattan splints to reinforced the strength and conceal the joint. Usually a rounded corner reinforcement is provided on cross or "T" joint for strength and contour enrichment. Development of Philippine Embroidery Embroidery is the ornamentation of textiles and other materials with needlework for personal use and decoration not only at home but for offices as well. The tem embroidery is an English word derived from the old French embroiders meaning edge and border. Embroidery was introduced into the Orient by the Netherlanders in the 15th century. It bought by the Spaniards into the Philippines where it has made a wonderful growth, and work done it rivals the best work done in Switzerland, a country noted for its exquisite embroidery. Tape measure -use for Gauge- Use to measure measuring more than one- short distance foot distance or materials Thimbles- made of metal or Embroidey hoop/stiletto-made plastic, protect the middle finger of wood, bone, metal or plastic and push the needle while doing use to make eyelets in the fabric your embroidery work. This to be embroidered. It is also use to come in sizes 6 (small) to 12 keep the fabric stretched while embroidery stitches are applied on (large) the design. Embroidery scissors is small, sharp and pointed good for line work use tor trimming scallops, clipping threads, and cutting large eyelets
Protect the blade by keeping them in sheath or covered and
get them sharpened occasionally.
Needle threader -Is use for easier
threading especially by those sewers with poor eyesight. Pounce- is fine powder used in transferring design by pricking method. Embroidery needle a short pieces of steel with a fine point at one end and a little opening or eye at the other. The kind of embroidery work to do and the kind of thread to use are two things to be considered in choosing your needle.
Crewel sizes 1-10 are sharp-pointed,
medium length with large eyes for easy threading they are used for most standard embroidery stitchery. Chenille sizes 13-26 are Tapestry needle is from sizes also sharp-pointed needles 13-26. They are similar in size but they are thicker and to chenille but are blunt rather longer and have large eyes. than sharp. This makes them They are types of needles best for thread-counting appropriate for embroidery embroidery and for the needle that is worked with heavier point as well. yarns. Water color brush use for transferring Tracing paper used for Pin cushion-a place the design using tracing designs. for pins and needles. pricking and pouncing methods. Sewing box use to keep together the embroidery tools and materials
Bag-to keep work clean and
fresh, have a bag made from washable material to hold your work when not busy on it