![]() A participant at the Hartford Artisans Weaving Center |
Weaving and caning are considered important art forms and skilled handicrafts. Most histories of the development of blindness services now acknowledge that blind people used to be relegated to a very limited number of employment-related occupations (formerly called the "blind trades"), including chair caning, piano tuning, broom making, and basket weaving.
This is no longer the case, however, and blind people are now gainfully employed in nearly every occupation.
Weaving and caning are creative handicrafts that can be enjoyed tactually through an appreciation of the infinite variety of woven textures and through the counting of patterns. If you have low vision, both crafts can also be visually stimulating through the use of contrasting colors and patterns.
![]() Mayster Braille Loom |
A number of craft guilds that were started by organizations of and for the blind still exist today and can be excellent places to learn the arts of weaving or caning. The mission of the Hartford Artisans Weaving Center [1], for example, is to promote and teach the craft of handweaving in a supportive and creative community.
The Center encourages people who are blind or have low vision to develop their skills and interests in creating original hand-woven items. Their web site provides a good explanation of the process of weaving [2] and includes helpful illustrations for many of the steps and adaptations.
The Mayster Braille Loom [3] is strung with yarn of different colors and textures. Each color and texture corresponds to one of the six dots that comprise the braille cell [4]. The weaver simultaneously pushes a combination of these levers, which lift different sets of strings and create textile patterns that are actually words. Blind persons can read these words by touch, and sighted persons may decipher the words by the color combination.
![]() A weaving loom |
Links:
[1] http://www.visionaware.org/the_hartford_artisans_center
[2] http://www.weavingcenter.org/process.html
[3] http://www.visionaware.org/mayster_designs_ltd
[4] http://www.visionaware.org/all_about_braille
[5] http://www.visionaware.org/labeling_marking
[6] http://www.visionaware.org/home-craft-area-blind-low-vision
[7] http://groups.yahoo.com/group/blindcraft
[8] http://www.visionaware.org/copper_dots
[9] http://www.visionaware.org/american_printing_house_for_the_blind
[10] http://www.visionaware.org/royal_national_institute_for_the_blind_rnib_uk
[11] http://www.visionaware.org/sports_groups