a_s1618_04_tape15 | Gladys Lanthripp interview for the Duval County Folk Arts in Education Project | Sound | Field recordings Interviews Oral narratives Quilting Quilts Textile processes Needlework Embroidery | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Gladys Lanthripp interview for the Duval County Folk Arts in Education Project
- Date
- 1988-07-05
- Description
- One audio cassette. Quilter Lanthripp was a retired factory worker, and a lifelong Duval County resident. She discusses learning quilting from her mother; quilting for hire; selling quilts; quilting in Maxville; the quilt making process; quilting patterns; embroidery; quilting techniques; and the Peace with Justice Quilt.
- Collection
a_s1622_03_tape01 | Penny King interview for the Southwest Florida Folk Arts Project | Sound | Field recordings Greek Americans Embroidery Machine sewing Sewing machines Needlework Embroidery thread Ironing boards Interviews Oral narratives | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Penny King interview for the Southwest Florida Folk Arts Project
- Date
- 1988-01-26
- Description
- One audio cassette. King learned to embroider with a treadle sewing machine by watching her mother in Greece. She discusses learning from her mother; use of the treadle sewing machine; designs; colors and materials used; threads; needles; moving to Florida (1987); products she makes; and others in her field.
- Collection
a_s1640_20_tape10 | Interview with Hungarian embroiderers Margaret Horvath and Elizabeth Spreckelsen | Sound | Needleworkers Embroiderers Apprentices Interviews Sound recordings Emigration and immigration Family history Embroidery Needlework German Americans Hungarians Americans Teaching of folklore Textile arts Decorative arts Design Life histories Oral histories Occupational groups | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Interview with Hungarian embroiderers Margaret Horvath and Elizabeth Spreckelsen
- Date
- 1985-03-06
- Description
- One audio cassette. Spreckelsen apprenticed under Margaret Horvath in 1984-1985. Horvath was a Hungarian and moved to the U.S. in 1970. Spreckelsen was from a German American family in New York City. They discuss immigration; family history; learning embroidery; types of Hungarian embroidery; designs; and teaching embroidery. For a transcript, see S 1640, box 2, folder 9. Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program began in 1983 with a NEA grant of $22,000. The program provided an opportunity for master folk artists to share technical skills and cultural knowledge with apprentices in order to keep the tradition alive. Apprentices must have had some experience in the tradition and agreed to train for at least six months. The first project director was Blanton Owen, later replaced by folklorist Peter Roller. The program was continued each year through 2003.
- Collection
a_s1640_22_tape18 | Margaret Horvath & apprentice Sylvia Daniels interview for the Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program | Sound | Embroidery Needlepoint Field recordings Interviews Hungarian Americans Needlework Oral history narratives Textile processes | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
a_s1640_22_tape19 | Interview with embroiderer Margaret Horvath | Sound | Fieldwork Interviews Arts, Hungarian Hungarians Americans Embroidery Needlework Personal experience narratives Life histories Design Embroiderers Needleworkers | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Interview with embroiderer Margaret Horvath
- Date
- 1991-07-24
- Description
- Two audio cassettes. For more information on Horvath, see S 1644, box 8, folder 6. The Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program began in 1983 with a NEA grant of $22,000. The program provided an opportunity for master folk artists to share technical skills and cultural knowledge with apprentices in order to keep the tradition alive. Apprentices must have had some experience in the tradition and agreed to train for at least six months. The first project director was Blanton Owen, later replaced by folklorist Peter Roller. The program was continued each year through 2004.
- Collection
a_s1680_02_tape03 | Interview with Panayiota (Penny) King | Sound | Embroiderers Needleworkers Fieldwork Arts, Greek Embroidery Greek Americans Decorative arts Domestic arts Canning and preserving Games Needlework Life histories Oral histories Emigration and immigration Oral communication Family history Interviews | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
a_s1685_06_tape28 | Erna Papard interview for the Palm Beach County Folk Arts in Education Project | Sound | Embroidery Knitting Needlework Field recordings Interviews Oral narratives Clothing Life histories Dollmaking Emigration Family history | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_audio.jpg |
Erna Papard interview for the Palm Beach County Folk Arts in Education Project
- Date
- 1986-08-19
- Description
- Two audio cassettes. Parpard describes growing up in Heidelburg, Germany; learning embroidery and knitting from her mother and grandmother; types of stitching; items made (dolls, clothes, slippers); childhood and schooling during 1930s Germany; Polish farm workers; her mother's death; taking care of her grandmother; emigrating to the US in 1937, and to Florida in 1960; dollmaking; writing poetry; and teaching embroidery to her grandchildren.
- Collection
a_s1714_03_tape08 | Theresa Griffin interview for the St. Johns River Survey | Sound | Field recordings Needlework Minorcan Americans Textile art Foodways Decorative arts Crocheting Embroidery Interviews | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/audio.jpg |
Andrea and Sylvia Kolozsvary learning Hungarian embroidery | Andrea and Sylvia Kolozsvary learning Hungarian embroidery | Still Image | Needleworkers Embroiderers Apprentices Hungarians Americans Embroidery Needlework Textile arts Decorative arts Material culture | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Andrea and Sylvia Kolozsvary learning Hungarian embroidery
- Date
- 1985-03
- Description
- Seven color slides. Andrea and Sylvia apprenticed under Margaret Horvath in 1984-1985. Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program began in 1983 with a NEA grant of $22,000. The program provided an opportunity for master folk artists to share technical skills and cultural knowledge with apprentices in order to keep the tradition alive. Apprentices must have had some experience in the tradition and agreed to train for at least six months. The first project director was Blanton Owen, later replaced by folklorist Peter Roller. The program was continued each year through 2003.
- Collection
Andrea and Sylvia Kolozsvary learning Hungarian embroidery from Margaret Horvath | Andrea and Sylvia Kolozsvary learning Hungarian embroidery from Margaret Horvath | Still Image | Needleworkers Embroiderers Apprentices Hungarians Americans Embroidery Needlework Textile arts Decorative arts Material culture | /fpc/memory/omeka_images/thumbnails/catalog_photo.jpg |
Andrea and Sylvia Kolozsvary learning Hungarian embroidery from Margaret Horvath
- Date
- 1985-04
- Description
- Two proof sheets with twenty-three black and white images (plus negatives). Andrea and Sylvia apprenticed under Margaret Horvath in 1984-1985. The Folk Arts Apprenticeship Program began in 1983 with a NEA grant of $22,000. The program provided an opportunity for master folk artists to share technical skills and cultural knowledge with apprentices in order to keep the tradition alive. Apprentices must have had some experience in the tradition and agreed to train for at least six months. The first project director was Blanton Owen, later replaced by folklorist Peter Roller. The program was continued each year through 2003.
- Collection