16 July 2018

While Away A Day at Weston Park



The City; SHEFFIELD

The Museum; WESTON PARK

The Verdict?  OUTSTANDING.             

Take a beautiful building, set it in extensive grounds, add a superb collection of artifacts and voila! A Museum.  But Weston Park does not stop there. What is inside is fabulous. I went in for the costumes and textiles and stayed for the woolly rhino and the Park Hill kitchen and much more.

Here are some snapshots of the costume and textiles I so enjoyed. 
Plus news of an original and compassionate initiative to help gravely wounded soldiers recover their lives, families and jobs. (Clue. This started in 1915.) 

This could have been a wedding Kimono. The decoration was luminous in its lustre.


                                         

All the costume I saw was lovely. Cases all had period artifacts as well as costume. The exhibition spaces were beautifully arranged so you walked into an era and there were shop interiors, housing (both good and bad) and lots of interesting bite sized bits of Sheffield life. Some of this life was colourful and happy, other parts not so cheerful....the Sheffield Flood of  1864 is a sobering case to look at and examine the articles that are all that's left of whole families, homes and businesses.
But all was not gloomy....Here's a glimpse of some of my favourite sights.
  

                                                                         
 A 1940s Summer dress, plus two examples of the ingenious methods employed during WW2 to make the most of what you could get hold of. A chemise made of yellow parachute silk and a tiny packet of 'Vegetable Leaflets', dye soaked paper leaves to be used to redden your lips when your lipstick ran out. And before we leave the forties...a fine brown Utility dress.
                                               
                                      
                             





             




Ultra modern curtains from the Festival of Britain 1951.




Swinging Sixties Anyone?

              







And now for that innovative scheme to help with rehabilitation for shattered lives.
Look at this wondrous dress and admire the exquisite watercolour designs.



                      

Silk chiffon dress c 1930. Design by Annie Bindon Carter.


Designs by Annie Bindon Carter  1920 - 1930.


This extraordinary lady not only founded and managed this remarkable enterprise, but was artisitic director from 1918 to 1959.

What enterprise I hear you ask?  
Painted Fabrics Limited. A company that recognised that disabled people had rights and set about providing a platform for them to work in a highly skilled enterprise...as the Museum says this was 'Work not Charity'. 

For the full story see;


& scroll down to P

Weston Park Museum  Western Bank Sheffield S10 2TP