Showing posts with label Shoes and storytelling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shoes and storytelling. Show all posts

Monday, 29 September 2014

The 12 Dancing Princesses!


Fished this out for a friend - it's the re-write (500 words only) I did of the story for Bristol Storytelling Festival and the story trail on the Gloucester Road Bristol. See note at the end. Here's the link to all the shoe making!
 















The 12 Dancing Princesses

The Baron of Bristol was a man of power. He collected taxes from the hardworking Bristolians, ran the competition which saw Brunel build a bridge across the gorge and pulled the train track builders to Bristol to help us trade with lands near and far.

One thing that left him troubled & powerless were his 12 daughters. He loved them dearly…but they were bright, intelligent and wilful and he feared that the rest of the world would think him weak for not having better control over his girls, so at night, he locked them in a fortified chamber with a golden key which he hung around his neck.

One morning, the Baron unlocked the chamber to find that his daughters’ shoes were in tatters; soles loose, embroidery ruined and seams broken open. It was as if they had danced the night away! But how? The chamber was locked! They were wilful and kept their secret.

This enraged the Baron so he set a challenge, find his daughters’ secret. Many young men tried & failed & were banished to far away lands.

The hopeful men spent the night in a chamber adjoining the bedroom, which was lined with 12 beds and 12 sleeping daughters, and despite their attempts to stay awake, the men slept soundly and woke to find 12 pairs of tattered shoes and the secret intact.

In a local Tavern, The Three Sugar Loaves, a penniless and hopeful Scottish shipbuilder, who lived on Christmas Steps, heard about the Baron and his 12 daughters. He loved nothing better than to solve a problem and needed the cash reward to help finance his dream of opening a shipyard, in the docks of Bristol. The landlady of The Three Sugar Loaves handed a parcel to the young man, and whispered in his ear.

‘Do not drink the wine the girls offer you, it contains a sleeping potion . Wear this invisibility cloak & follow them closely.’ Bright girls, he thought to himself.

That night the young shipbuilder was welcomed by the Baron of Bristol to his home, a grand house on Victoria Square. He tipped the wine into the chamber pot, bade goodnight to the girls, got the cloak ready and faked sweet slumber.

‘He’s asleep’, he heard one of the girls whisper. His ears alert, eyes ready to follow the girls.

He saw them lift a tapestry and walk down a secret stairwell and enter the Underfall, the world under the streets of Bristol. They walked into a blue forest with trees fashioned from glass, he grabbed a blue orb from a tree and pulled it under his cloak. 

The daughters glided in gondoliers across a silver lake and arrived at a palace. From the safety of his cloak he watched each girl engage in lively conversation with 12 young men. He listened to their conversations about travel, steam engines, engineering, politics and the poor and watched their faces drop.

‘No one wants to listen to us and our ideas’, one sighed. The night was young and girls not wanting to waste the beautiful music from the band, danced until their shoes were in tatters.

He followed them for two more nights. Everything happened as it had before. The shipbuilder brought back with him a gondolier’s hat and dipped a jar into the silver lake to bring back some of the magical water.

On the third morning the Baron called the shipbuilder and his 12 daughters to his study, it was a bit of a squeeze!

‘Well?’, he questioned the young man.

‘You lock away in the chamber each night the future of our city; the engineers, the social reformers, the doctors and explorers.’ With this he placed on the Baron’s desk the blue glass orb, the gondoliers hat and the jar of silvery water. The girls were shocked, their secret had been uncovered.

‘What you can not see is that your bright, intelligent and wilful daughters are a blessing to you and our world. Throw away that key and do everything you can to let them shine’.

The Baron heard for himself, for the first time, that his daughters were jewels and that by being bright, intelligent and wilful they would change the world and that he needed to celebrate their gifts, not fear them or how others thought about him.

The shipbuilder  took his reward and invested in his passion, shipbuilding, and in memory of his nights with the Baron’s daughters he called it The Underfall Yard.


This story was re-worked by Alli Tillcock

In the original story of the 12 Dancing Princesses, whilst I admire the princesses for being able to trick each spy and escape into a fantasy world, I think that the reward (one of the Princesses is married off to the man who discovers their secret) treats them as objects to be married off, which they most definitely are not!

I wanted to place the story in a time of change for Bristol and reflect it’s industrial heritage in the story. Would the world have been different if Brunel was a woman? Discuss…

Being creative with words and fabric are really important to me, and Flo-Jo’s being here on the Gloucester Road is like a jewel. I love the idea that behind the things we make with our hands that there’s a story, some flow and we can take time out from our busy lives and relax, stitch, chat & create.


Alli Tillcock – Alli Handmade on Facebook or check out my blog theemptyoxobox.

Monday, 25 February 2013

Friday, 1 February 2013

Shoe templates here!

Hi lovelies - if you've seen this display and fancy making a pair of these shoes, you can find templates for them all in this blog entry here. Send me photos of any you make!




Tuesday, 29 January 2013

Shoes and Storytelling - the final push!

The last of the shoes were made last night - it was a flurry of Uhu, Pritt, Superglue, fluffy stuff, holographic paper, doilies & gems.

I'll post pics of the window display soon.









Monday, 21 January 2013

Shoes and storytelling 5 - free-machine embroidery shoe!

Still playing with shoes....this time fabric coverings.

Felt inspired to play on the sewing machine and stitched out some patterns.

I had probelms with the stitching, but I like the effcet on the reverse, wrong side..

I cut the fabric larger than the pattern and with the power of super glue, constructed a stitched slipper for the story trail display.







Friday, 18 January 2013

Shoes and storytelling 4 - Night 1 of creations!

The elves gathered at my house one night and made about 6 complete pairs of shoes. What do you think?




















Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Shoes and storytelling - 3. A ‘directory of concealed shoes’

This blogging malarky sometimes takes you to places you were not expecting to travel. That's what happened to me this afternoon, when googling for images of 'paper shoes', I came across the activity of concealing shoes in buildings.





































'They (Shoes) were apparently concealed in buildings as good luck tokens or to ward off evil spirits, a practice done in secret an not talked about,  which makes research difficult. They are usually discovered when a house is being renovated or knocked down.' Source

An artist,  Joanne B Kaar, working in Northern Scotland based a project on objects of mystery in the local museum, one of the mystery items being a shoe found concealed in the walls of a building, the Melness Shoe. Read more about the projects she created as artist in residence here. Chcek out all the links and other stories of concealed shoes and mythology on the side bar of this link. 

As part of the project the artist created and concealed shoes with messages about the Melness shoe to create a dialogue about the mysterious activity of concealing shoes in buildings.


Joanne B Kaar
I loved watching this video from a shoe resources officer - (what a job title!)



What's buried in the walls of your house? 

Shoes and storytelling - 2. Inspiration






I've been seeking out some inspiration for this project and last night I printed out a template and wrote the words to songs with the word 'dance' in it and a Doris Day favourite.





Other inspiration has come from the following:

1) Check out the wonderful creations here at The Creative Self These are so delicate.



2) These ones are from lariscrap.blogspot.co.uk/



3) Lots of wild shoes here from various artists ......


4) I also like the idea of creating the 'material' for the shoe using laminates with trapped material inside - threads of cotton, fabric, paper, maps, glitter etc - to make some 'glass-like' shoes...and maybe some paper cuts to decorate the shoes see paper-cutting-obsession post here.

Watch this space

Alli x



Sunday, 6 January 2013

Shoes and storytelling - 1. Prototypes

I've been mocking up prototypes of paper shoes this weekend. Why? Well, there's a lovely storytelling festival in Bristol this month, Bristol Storytelling Festival 2013,  and I've got involved in re-writing a story for the Gloucester Road Story Trail part of the festival. The story trail starts on Feb 1st with a storytelling event at a local cafe,Bubalu
I've gone for high heels, a baby Mary-Jane
and a slipper shoe!

'Family storytelling to celebrate the new Gloucester Road Story Trail with storyteller Paula Brown and friends.

The Gloucester Road Story Trail was inspired by the success of the local art trails and aims to link local authors and storytellers, shopkeepers and artists with stories about our area to create a trail that children and adults alike can follow and collect. Look out for the letters on the gingerbread man’s tummy, piece them together and jiggle them about ‘til they make a word!


From the end of January 2013 you can follow the map to find the stories, some traditional tales and some invented. The full set will be posted here soon to make your own book at home.' Taken from here.


I've re-worked 'The 12 Dancing Princesses' which will be displayed in local fabric, haberdashery, sewing space, Flo-Jo Boutique, run by Erika and Dee. 

As well as displaying the story as a poster, we are also planning a fab display for the window of shoes (read the original story here) fashioned from card, paper, fabric and ribbons.

A team of friends will be making the shoes and I've been doing some research and mocking up the prototypes to kick things going.

Here's what I've made and sources:

1) High heels from 
Ellen Hutson at Keepsakes

Oo lala!
2) I couldn't resist these cute baby shoes from www.scribd.com 


So very cute...but I'm not sure that
a princess wearing these won't be
walking, let alone dancing!


3) These beautiful slippers, 'These are the ones I imagine them to be wearing' says my 10 year old, which I found at Artful Affirmations. I've played around with the shaping of the toe part and heel.




Watch this space to see how this project and the creations develop - I'm hoping that we'll be taken away on a magic carpet with our imaginations and produce some beautiful shoes!

Toodle-pip
 
Alli x