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"Don't worry about people stealing your ideas. If your ideas are any good, you'll have to ram them down people's throats."
Howard Aiken
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Opinion Pieces
These are opinion pieces by our members that have previously appeared on our home page.
They are listed in reverse order, with the top item being the latest.
Please remember: these opinions are written by individual members and do not necessarily reflect the views of the BGTW.
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Calais Lace Museum, by John Ruler |
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In praise of the Lace Museum in Calais
September 24, 2010
John Ruler, BGTW, on a new museum that made a lasting impression
The International City of Lace and Fashion, Calais, is no mere museum but, as its name implies, a spanking new building showcasing the port’s industrial heritage and local expertise.
A hub, too, for studies, research and creativity, it positively hums with history, including four fully operational machine–driven looms similar to those smuggled over by three skilled 19th century lace-workers from Nottingham.
It was these then state-of-the-art weavers' looms which quickly led to a flourishing lace trade. By 1830 there were 113 manufacturers, the majority British.
All of which is neatly laced into this €28 million insight into a town now better known for its car ferry port and the Channel Tunnel. While the glistening glass of the space-age façade and reception depicts the original perforated cards for transferring complicated designs ready for production, the red brick walls and corridors of the old Boulart factory, one of the largest from the 1870s, now houses a veritable whirlwind of hues and hems.
Not for nothing are the displays of 10,000 lace pieces and 3,200 costumes relating to the world of fashion flagged as ‘ a spiritual, sensual and sensory experience.’ Five permanent exhibitions span the techniques, social history and use of lace, from handmade items to the future of this most frothy of feminine finery. The Spirit of Lingerie, which runs to November, discreetly proves the point …
The Citié Internationale de la dentelle et de la mode Calais,135 quai du Commerce; tel:+ 03 21 00 42 30; email:
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; www.cite-dentelle.fr; is open daily (except Tuesdays) major public holidays and for a brief spell in early January. Entry for both the permanent or temporary exhibition is €5 for adults or €2.50 for children. Under fives are free.
John Ruler’s Bradt guide to the whole of Nord-Pas de Calais will be published shortly.
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"Sharleen LaVallee, one of the dog handlers, explained that most of the dogs were "rescue" animals and loved sledding. They certainly seemed suitably eager to run in a pack, pulling anything - or anyone - silly enough to grab hold. It was all LaVallee, a large, strong woman who doubles as a Toronto cop and the first female Harley-Davidson mechanic in Canada, could do to keep them from taking off before we were ready."
From "It's a slippery slope: Do it right or the dog gets it", Ferne Arfin, The Sunday Telegraph, 9 October 2006 |
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