HANDMADE shirts - celebrating East Lancashire’s historic bond with the textiles industry - have been fashioned by college lecturers and volunteers.

Over the course of last summer, researchers from the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) have been working with some of the men who migrated from Pakistan and India to make new homes in Blackburn, Burnley and Accrington because of the trade.

Their personal recollections and experiences have now been woven into a range of prototype garments, which have gone on display at the Queen Street Mill museum in Burnley as part of the British Textile Biennial.

Former textile workers, including Burnley borough councillor Arif Khan, were able to share their stories with modern-day students as part of the joint project, also supported by Gawthorpe Textile Collection and funded by the Arts Council.

And the shirts they then went on to create came from cloth woven on the historic Queen Street looms, the last remaining steam-powered frames in the world.

Amanda Odlin-Bates, fashion course leader at UCLan, said: “Pennine Lancashire is famous as the home of textile production in the UK and it is easy to forget it was such a big industry that people came to work here from around the world.

“This project highlights the amazing Queen Street Mill, that we are so lucky to have in Burnley.

“I saw an opportunity to create garments from the cloth that is still woven at the mill on these Victorian looms, and the Heirloom Shirt Project was born.”

Traditional techniques including applique, ‘Kantha’ stitch, ‘Shisha mirror work’ and screen printing were all deployed, with the help of lead artists. to help embellish the finished articles.

Before embarking on the initiative, those taking part were also able to draw inspiration from some of the exhibits at the Gawthorpe Textile Collection, which is housed at the National Trust property near Padiham.

An official launch for the project was staged at the museum on Saturday, with those taking part invited to explain the thinking behind their own individual prototype. The shirts will remain on display there until November 3.

A project to explore the nostalgic history of Lancashire’s cotton mills and recreate it as pieces of fashion is hosting an exhibition of its hand embellished shirts.

The Heirloom Shirt Project, a collaborative piece of work between University of Central Lancashire (UCLan) researchers, Gawthorpe Textile Collection and Queen Street Mill in Burnley, has been working with the local community in Pennine Lancashire over the summer, hearing stories from men who have links to the textile industry, including men who migrated from India and Pakistan.

The men’s personal stories have now been used to create a collection of individual shirts. The project team interpreted these, often emotional, stories into visual representations using surface embellishments such as applique, ‘Kantha’ stitch, ‘Shisha mirror work’ and screen printing to illustrate these highly personal narratives.

Each unique shirt, bespoke to the participant’s connections within the Lancashire cotton industry, was created using cloth woven from the Victorian looms in Queen Street Mill – the last remaining steam powered looms in the world. These individual garments have created the ultimate heirloom for the men to take away and cherish for future generations.

The design details and silhouettes were developed through study days at Gawthorpe Hall, observing shirts from the 1800s held within the Gawthorpe Textile Collection. Details were used such as the cross-stitch numbering system used for laundering garments and triangular inserts that strengthened seams in the design prototypes. Each participant individually selected a prototype shirt and lead artists incorporated pertinent embellishments to reveal their personal stories.

The Arts Council funded project is displaying the completed heirloom shirts at an exhibition in the weaving shed of Queen Street Mill, with the men who participated in the programme talking about the entire process and their experience at an official launch on Saturday, October 12.

The final display will also be featured as part of the British Textile Biennial, which runs until November 3.

Amanda Odlin-Bates, Fashion Course Leader at UCLan, said: “Pennine Lancashire is famous as the home of textile production in the UK and it is easy to forget it was such a big industry that people came to work here from around the world. This project is to highlight the amazing Queen Street Mill, that we are so lucky to have in Burnley. I saw an opportunity to create garments from the cloth that is still woven at the mill on these Victorian looms, and the Heirloom shirt project was born.”

Tim Birtwistle, who participated in the project, said: “It’s wonderful that Lancashire’s cotton industry is being remembered in the Heirloom Project. Lancashire’s textile heritage and the relationship between the cotton mills and its people has been sensitively remembered through individual personal stories. I am delighted that my family’s involvement with the rise of the cotton industry in Lancashire has been recognised in the project. It has also been exciting to see archive information and family details being realised visually through the finished piece.”

ENDS.

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