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Football in Our Street – ONS Rematch

In August we reclaimed the High Street of Dumfries town centre with football (albeit in a cage – next time we can try without!).  Celebrating the long standing friendship of local football club Greystone Rovers with Norway started in a 1940 match between Dumfries locals and Norwegian exiles resulting in a draw.  A rematch was called and eventually played in Bergen in 1951 beginning a series of exchange visits over the years since.  With Greystone Rovers 80th anniversary upcoming in 2018 they are keen to resume their friendship and exchange opportunities for their club members.  Graham Muir, club manager, has supported The Stove’s Our Norwegian Story project as an important recognition of how beneficial these friendships can be.

This event tied in with the Our Land festival of events across Scotland looking at land use and the importance of community ownership of these spaces.  The Stove wrote an article to highlight how our events can reach out to tackle wider national issues which can be found here on The Common Space website:

www.commonspace.scot/articles/9000/our-land-its-time-buy-back-our-high-street

Our Norwegian Story continues to develop, with the depth of stories bubbling up from under the surface, with personnel memories knitting together these more historical events.

Stay tuned for more next week – Films, food, drawing big maps and stitching our story into existence!

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Football in our Streets
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Activity outside The Stove
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The Greystone Rovers youth team
The Greystone Rovers youth team
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Screen printing T-shirts with Sarah Keast
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Memorabilia from the 70 year relationship between Greystone Rovers and SK Brann was on display in The Stove
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Time for Subbuteo

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Our Scottish/Norwegian Skill Share

Back to “Our Norwegian Story” so far – July brought us a two day event sharing skills and learning about our common love of making.  We made boats, oars, whistles, rope and nets while also exploring the knitting of Sanquhar patterns and their Norwegian counterparts.  Our friends from Galgael Trust up in Glasgow, Alyne Jones of Moniaive, Simon Lidwell of local group Clauran Haven and Wordsmithcrafts helped us explore the beauty of skilled craft and our intertwined history within it.

The Stove ‘Our Norwegian Story’
Rowing instruction from Cluaran
A different kind of street market
Whistle Making with Nora from Forest Schools
Oar making with the Galgael Trust
Knitting with Alyne Jones of Vanishing Scotland
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Snapshots Dumfries

Snapshots – a fast paced photography competition was first conceived by blueprint100 member Elli – invited competitors to challenge themselves and their camera to a day of exploring the town through different topics in the form of a photography marathon.

2 Hours, 12 Topics, 12 Pictures

In the run up to the competition, photographer and Stove member Kim Ayres joined the blueprint100 Open Tuesdays, to offer help, hints and inspiration to those interested in taking part.

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An ambitious 20 participants raced off at 10am, keen to win the ‘golden camera’ that was first prize, and most returned bedraggled and worn out and in need of coffee!

The judging panel was comprised of Kim, stove curatorial member Martin J O’Neill and Elli herself, who spent the following two hours judging all of the images that had arrived back at the Stove.

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Image credit: Kim Ayres
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Following on from the competition, Martin hosted a workshop with blueprint100 members developing narratives from the collected photograph sets, to work into short pieces of poetry and prose in the run up to the next Brave New Words.

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A selection of our favourite images from Snapshots Dumfries are available to view here

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Borderlands II – Journeys to the Ice Age

Borderlands II was a two day conference, including an amazing peat coring at Kirkconnel Flow, organised by Stove member and environmental artist Kate Foster, with delegates arriving from Northumbria and Cumbria, The Borders and D&G, as well as further afield.

The peat coring, led by Dr Lauren Parry, was a time travelling experience back to the Ice Age through the samples of peat and eventually down to boulder clay, six meters down in the depths of the bog.

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The second day was spent in the Stove, including exhibition and talks given by a range of speakers including story teller Malcolm Green, Dave Pritchard on wetlands, and Nadiah Rosli’s focus on Peatlands of South East Asia.

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Image: The corer used for the Peat Coring workshop, accompanied by artwork by Kate Foster
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Craftivism at The Stove

Every Wednesday in November, The Stove is hosting a series of ‘craftivism’ stitch-ins. These are drop-in events running from 5:00 pm to 8:00 pm. Everyone is welcome, whether you bring your own craft skills or wish to learn some basic techniques in a friendly and open environment (we have cake!).

What is Craftivism?

Craftivism is a form of ‘slow activism’ that involves sharing crafting skills in a social space, encouraging discussion and reflection while creating—engaging in the time-consuming processes of stitching and making. It is a growing movement of crafters and open-minded individuals seeking to foster new ways of exchange and discussion around issues and topics they hope to share with others. Join us for a blether, a cup of tea, and help contribute to some of the projects we are currently working on. These sessions are self-led, but there is plenty of support available from our Herald, Moxie, and craftivist, Joy Cheroukai.

Why Now?

The Stove is participating in ArtCOP, an international cultural programme that coincides with this year’s Paris Climate Conference (also known as COP21) in December. We are exploring new ways to discuss the environment and the constantly changing nature of our world—what is changing for Dumfries and Galloway? What does climate change mean to us? Do we need a new language to address global climate issues? And what role does Dumfries play in all of this?

Our craftivism group is working on two projects:

Wear Your Heart on Your Sleeve is a national campaign from the Craftivist Collective and the Climate Coalition. It encourages everyone to reflect on the things they are passionate about and, in turn, consider how these could be affected by changing climates and rising temperatures.

The Stop Climate Chaos Rally is on 28th November, and Scotland’s Climate March will take place in Edinburgh. The Stove has been invited by the Crichton Carbon Centre to join their bus to take part in the rally. Stitchers and makers at our craftivism sessions are working on a large banner to be carried in the march. This banner will be made up of smaller patterns and designs created from unwanted fabrics.

We will be hosting an intensive banner-making weekend before the rally, on 21st and 22nd November.

If you would like a place on the bus (travel expenses covered by The Stove), please get in touch, as spaces are limited. Contact Katie at [email protected].

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Trading Journeys: On Yer Bike

Our third intrepid traveller, Uula Jero, will leave Balmaclellan on Saturday morning, picking up keen cyclists at New Galloway and making their way down to Wigtown, passing through the picturesque Galloway Forest Park. If cycling is your thing, you are very welcome to join Uula at New Galloway.

Uula will be somewhat unmistakable as he brings with him not just one of his amazing cargo bikes, but also a pedal-powered foundry! Remember the charcoal that the boats are bringing from Creetown (see the earlier post here); the foundry is charcoal-fuelled, and the Creetown charcoal will contribute to the heat necessary to melt and cast our very own Wigtown spoons! (More about Billy Marshall and his spoons here.)

One of our early foundry tests. We do not reccomend coal as it is a bit too much for our liking! Image thanks to The Hidden Mill
One of our early foundry tests. We do not recommend coal as it is a bit too much for our liking! Image thanks to The Hidden Mill.
Early test pours in Balmaclellan
Early test pours in Balmaclellan.

The spoons will be cast in front of a live audience outside the Wigtown County Buildings as part of Trading Journeys on Saturday evening, the 27th of September. We are making a very limited edition of spoons, so if you would like your very own Wigtown spoon, come along to our spoon mould crafting workshop during the afternoon. Workshops will take place from 12 noon in Southfield Park and are free to everyone.

Our foundry had it's first outing as part of our Nithraid earlier this month in Dumfries, where we cast Nithraid buttons!
Our foundry had its first outing as part of our Nithraid earlier this month in Dumfries, where we cast Nithraid buttons! Image: Galina Walls.
Mould making workshops as part of Nithraid 2014. The moulds are made from cuttlefish if you are interested! Image: Galina Walls
Mould making workshops as part of Nithraid 2014. The moulds are made from cuttlefish if you are interested! Image: Galina Walls.

We will also be holding drumming and flag-making workshops in preparation for our procession prior to the spoon pour. The procession is open to all to join in.

Full details of the running order of the event are available on our website’s Trading Journeys page here.

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