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derbysilkmill · 5 years ago
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The Interlace Project - What is it and meet the volunteers
On the 15th of February this year I sat in on a workshop held at the Museum and Art Gallery as part of the Interlace Project. With the buzz of Pangolin Day happening in the World Collections gallery, I got to see a small group of museum volunteers getting to grips with the weaving work they were undertaking as part of the project, which will eventually form an art installation to go into the new Museum of Making. This was being led by artist Toni Buckby and museum volunteer Ruth Winterbottom. Scroll further down to find out more about the wonderful volunteers involved.
More recently I had the pleasure of talking again with Toni, and asked her some more in-depth questions about Interlace.
Please introduce yourself.
“My name is Toni Buckby and I'm an artist and PhD researcher based in Sheffield. My work spans the seemingly diverse but oddly related fields of textiles, electronics and computer art. I specialise in hand embroidery, with a particular focus on the 16th Century technique of blackwork, and the creation of experimental interactive electronics. I also spin, weave, draw, code, laser cut, 3D print... I spend most of my time attempting to get impractical ideas to function! I love to collaborate, so I often work with other artists on projects, as well as running public workshops and making a lot of my work available online for others to use. I see a parallel between the making of textiles and the making of digital work – both are logical processes of building complex structures through simple components. There is certainly a conceptual similarity, but I also create hybrid works, like embedding electronics into fabric or creating computer simulations based on textile techniques. I’m quite playful in my approach to my work – I take great delight in mashing (often disparate) materials and ideas together to see what happens - it’s why I like to collaborate so much. There's joy in the attempt to get something working (or not!).”
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Image: Toni introducing museum volunteers to the bare cocoon bodies they will be weaving onto
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Image: The wooden structures are modelled on silk moth cocoons, these being intrinsic to the silk weaving that took place at the Museum of Making site during the 18th Century. ©Toni Buckby
What is the Interlace Project?
“The Interlace Project began in 2017, when I was invited by Derby Museums to design and produce simple weaving looms that could be manufactured in the maker space at The Silk Mill. All the loom designs and instructions for how to use them were made available for free online (click here), and I've also run many public workshops in the basics of weaving using the looms. Inspired by the building's history as a silk spinning mill, I have now designed a large interactive textile sculpture, which is being made in collaboration with museum volunteers. The sculpture consists of nine woven silk moth cocoon shapes that have fibre optic light strands running through them; all being made by museum volunteer Ruth Winterbottom and her team of amazingly skilled volunteer weavers. The pattern of the lights will be programmed by visitors using punch cards (similar to the ones that were used to create weaving patterns on Jacquard looms in the 19th Century), and the colours will be controlled by touching small woven panels, a mixture of different fibres plus rows of conductive metal thread, that have been made by over 100 volunteers during several group workshops.”
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Image: An early cardboard mock-up gives an indication of what the installation will look like. ©Toni Buckby
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Image: An example of the fabric and metal touch panels that will form the interactive controls for the installation. ©Toni Buckby
What drew you towards wanting to work with Derby Museums and the Museum of Making?
“Two of my key interests as an artist are showing and sharing the processes of making. I love the fact that Derby’s Museum of Making will celebrate manufacturing processes as well as getting people involved through its events, workshops, volunteer programme and maker space. I've met so many brilliant, enthusiastic people over the course of developing The Interlace Project and it's been a real pleasure working with an organisation that has such similar interests.”
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Are there any thoughts or feelings you would like Interlace to provoke?
“I think, firstly, I hope visitors to the museum will be delighted by the piece - it's very playful! Secondly, I hope that people will take the time to appreciate the effort and skill of the volunteers who have made the work. I've been genuinely blown away by the quality and creativity of all those who have contributed so far - both the experienced weavers and those who had never woven before getting involved in the project. Everyone should be immensely proud of their work!”
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Image: One of the cocoons approaching completion, fibre-optic and organic threads interspersed
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Image: An example cocoon with the fibres illuminated. ©Toni Buckby
How will people be able to get involved with the project?
“Visitors to the museum will be able to interact with the sculptural installation by programming the light patterns and colours. Additionally, the online resources (designs and instructions) are available on the projects Instructables site, if people would like to have a go at weaving themselves. Finally, as the interactive woven panels are going to need to be replaced every few months, we are also (hopefully) going to have more workshops in future where people can have a go at weaving their own panel, which will then become (temporally) part of the installation”.
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It will be very exciting to see this artwork in action when it takes its place in the Museum of Making, and to see how it will very physically link the first use of Derby’s Silk Mill as a factory with it’s new iteration as the Museum of Making, showcasing our regions industrial heritage and innovative future.
Check back for more posts from Oliver!
Interlace Volunteer Responses
We asked some of our wonderful volunteers about their experience on the Interlace project and here’s what they had to say.
Ruth
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We asked Ruth why she decided to start volunteering with Derby Museums: 
‘I enjoy art, heritage and involvement with people and always relished my visits to the Museum.  When we moved into an apartment next to the Silk Mill, it was a no-brainer!’
What about Ruth’s involvement on the Interlace project?:
‘I’ve been working with Toni Buckby to help realise, with a team of local skilled craftspeople, her vision for a textile installation in the new Museum of Making. Toni references the silk cocoon and weaving in her computer-controlled light display.’
Ruth shared what she has got from being involved in the Interlace project:
‘It has been a pleasure and rare privilege to be part of such a professional textile project!  I’ve revisited old skills, learned new ones and interacted with lovely people, not least Toni herself.  She is a wonderful artist and generous person. It’s humbling to be part of the start of a new Museum’s journey.’
Barbara
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Barbara responded to a Derby Museums call out asking for volunteers for a weaving project; she said:
‘Weaving sounded right up my street! I love designing and making things particularly with textiles of all types.’
Just before the lockdown Barbara was able to take home a piece of the project to work on:
‘It took many hours of peaceful meditative activity which was marvellous occupation in the circumstances that was very good for me; also providing a topic of conversation with friends and family that was positive and different from the constant Covid coverage and shared anxious feelings of being separated from much loved and familiar people and activities’.
Hazel
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Hazel met volunteer project coordinator Ruth at a Derbyshire Guild of Weavers, Spinners & Dyers meeting where Ruth presented Toni Buckby’s concept:
‘I jumped at the chance [to be involved] - what a great idea and to be part of the museum redevelopment.’
Hazel has been weaving one of the cocoons:
‘This was something new for me and a bit of a challenge, but after over 60 hours of weaving I’m really pleased with the results [and have got] a huge sense of satisfaction from the weaving process and immense pride in what I’ve achieved. I can’t wait to see it installed.’
Sandra
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Sandra joined as a volunteer through the Derbyshire Guild of Weavers, Spinners and Dyers and has woven one of the cocoons:
‘As the silk mill was an important, past Derby industry I felt it was relevant, as a member of The Derbyshire Guild, to represent the group by using my weaving skills on a piece of the installation. It has been a great opportunity to work on a creative form using materials, especially the lighting, which I wouldn’t normally have used.’
Bibi
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Bibi explains why she got involved with the project:
‘The idea of weaving a cocoon was irresistible to me. I am also excited about the development of the Museum of Making and what it is going to offer to the community.’
However it wasn’t without its challenges:
‘This cocoon was a challenge. The design is so good and the whole exercise was very rewarding in its outcome. I am delighted to be part of the project as a group effort. I am looking forward to seeing them all illuminated.’
Joan
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Joan, as a weaver, was interested in helping with this project:
‘[I have] never undertaken a project of this sort before. I certainly found this an interesting challenge with the optical fibre being a difficult addition and always at the back of my mind the fact that my work was going to be on public display.’
Thank you to all of our volunteers who are helping to make the Museum of Making, we really wouldn’t be able to do it without you!
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derbysilkmill · 5 years ago
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My five favourite things on the Museum of Making Sketchfab Account - by Oliver Taylor
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What is Sketchfab? And what has it got to do with Museum of Making?
Sketchfab is an online resource and repository for 3D models, used by artists, designers, and institutions to share works and inspiration. The models uploaded to the website by these groups fit broadly into two categories; those made from scratch on a computer using 3D modelling programmes, including those used in the manufacturing and video-game industries, and others that are real world objects that have been scanned into a digital environment and then saved. This latter category is where Museum of Making fits in.
Led by Eilish Clohessy and others from the Derby Museums team, and assisted by volunteers, well over 100 objects from the Museum of Making collection have been scanned in. This 3D scanning is essentially a highly advanced version of the 2D document scanning you may have done at home or in the workplace. However, instead of taking one single picture of an object, a complex handheld scanner takes up to 16 pictures of the object per second as the operator slowly moves the scanner around the object. Said operator can then manipulate several partial scans into a single 3D model using appropriate software. From start to finish, scanning an object can take anywhere from a few hours to a few days, depending on the size and complexity of the object.
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A 3D Scanner of the type used by Derby Museums
In Derby Museums’ case there are other considerations that can further complicate the process. All objects from the collection must of course be treated with a sufficient level of care, and the light produced by the scanner means that any that are photo-sensitive can be unsuitable for 3D scanning. Transparent and translucent objects also create issues, as it can be akin to taking a picture through a window and the object is therefore not picked up. So, in a well-proven technique, a light dusting of talcum powder is used to temporarily mask the transparency and enable proper scanning while also not harming the object.
After a scan has been fully realised and ‘polished’, the museum team then upload a version of it to the Sketchfab website, with more being uploaded all the time. The 3D models are not able to be purchased or downloaded, but they are free to view at https://sketchfab.com/DerbySilkMill/models as part of rendering Museum of Making more accessible both in person and remotely. Below are five of my favourite objects on the Museum of Making Sketchfab page:
Rolls-Royce Eagle Engine
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One of the largest and by far the most complex object the museum has yet scanned, this V12 configuration Rolls-Royce Eagle aero engine is one of a pair that powered the first aerial trans-Atlantic crossing in June 1919. Its sculptural quality and cutting-edge technology and complexity for the time are both incredibly compelling to look at; as is being able to do so with such ease, when in reality the engine weighs over 400 kilos.
Elizabethan Measure
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Dating from 1601 and made from bronze, this Tudor measuring vessel would have been used to quantify amounts of substances such as liquids, flour, or grain. This object is symbolic of a bid for standardisation and fairness and goes hand in hand with the boom in trade across Britain and the world during the Renaissance.
Ornamental Spray
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This cast-iron ornamental spray would likely have been used as part of a building’s wall decoration or light fittings. It is made in the Rococo Revival style, this places it as being made roughly in the early to mid-19th century. Furnishings and architecture such as this are part of the built heritage of many towns and cities like Derby that grew larger and more prosperous off the back of the proceeds of the industrial revolution. Mass produced, probably from a hand-carved wooden moulding, this form of decoration would have been out of reach of the middle-class only a few generations before.
Semaphore Railway Signal
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This object is the arm which would have formed part of a railway signal. Its position would tell drivers of oncoming trains, whether the line ahead was free of other traffic, or if they needed to stop or slow their train in order to space services appropriately and avoid accidents. Semaphore signalling is so named as it resembles the system of raising and lowering different flags as an early method of communication between ships. Signals like this were first used from the mid-1850s, and although long since superseded, a few are still in use today.
Pritchard’s of Derby Soda Bottle
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Pritchard’s were a drinks firm founded in Derby in 1850. Originally only selling ginger beer from a single location on Kedleston Road, they later expanded into other beverages such as lemonade and apple wine. Having latterly amalgamated with other companies, the business was still operating locally in one form or another into the 1950s. This glass lemonade bottle is from the earlier part of the company’s life and would have been finished with a vulcanised rubber bottle stop, such as those invented by Charles Goodyear in 1844, which were often considered  preferable to earlier cork variants that tended to soak up liquids.
Visit Derby Museums’ Sketchfab to see more objects: https://sketchfab.com/DerbySilkMill/models
Check back for more weekly posts from Oliver!
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derbysilkmill · 5 years ago
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It Takes a Village to Make a Museum - Oliver Taylor
I was first introduced to the workshop that forms part of the forthcoming Museum of Making during my introduction to the project, having been shown around it as part of a health & safety induction. Located at the western corner of the Silk Mill site by the corner of Full Street, it is playing an important role in both the creation of the new museum, and in its future. Through comprehensive fabrication and woodworking facilities, the workshop is helping to manufacture the furnishings that will both display and store collections and artefacts, and in the future it will help nearby makers and artists share their’ skills and contribute to exciting and worthwhile local projects. It is helping the Museum become an active ‘doing’ space, rather than just a repository of objects.
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A workshop window
Coming back to see the workshop again, I really wanted to see how it operates on a typical day, and catch-up with what activities are currently being undertaken. Initially, the workshop had to furnish itself, using equipment and tools newly acquired and moved into the space to produce the shelving, cupboards, benches, and tables needed so that multiple people could work efficiently in the same space at the same time.
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Shelves and demonstration pieces around the workshop that helped to shakedown its new facilities
Now fully up and running, led by experts Steve and Andy, the workshop is now really getting stuck in to the task at hand: making parts for the ‘fit-out’ of all the different spaces within the Museum of Making. The most obvious and abundant of those elements are large jigsaw-piece like wooden sheets, cut from a sustainable wood product on a computer-controlled router, then sanded, bevelled and white-washed ready to become large robust shelving for the public facing collections storage rooms. These are almost all made now and are waiting in the wings to be assembled when overall building work has advanced far enough.
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Pre-fabricated wooden shelves, and a diagram on the wall of the workshop showing their end use
Also currently on the agenda, with members of museum staff even coming in during my visit to discuss final details, are a series of large sets of drawers, made from the same material as the shelves, that can hold and display smaller and more delicate items in the museum collection. Around 4 feet across and with a transparent acrylic sheet inset into the lip of each drawer, these will be used by both museum curatorial staff and the visiting public. I saw some of these being worked on by one of Derby Museums many volunteers, Emson Maneya, who was sanding near-complete draws ready for finishing and fitment of their acrylic tops. Emson, a Derby local of ten years, initially started volunteering at Pickford’s House museum a few years ago. More recently he moved over to the workshop at Museum of Making – despite no former fabrication experience – as a way to continue his involvement and gain skills that improve his job prospects.
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Part-built display drawers, and one being sanded down by Emson Maneya, a museum volunteer
Later, two more volunteers arrived to do some other work on this area of the project, Barbara Grundey, a retired NHS public health worker, and Jackie Taylor, a former Psychotherapist. They were both prepped on what they were going to be doing that day, and eagerly went off to undertake those tasks. These were, sanding down wooden batons that will become the drawer handles and the lip the acrylic sheets will be fixed to, and giving said batons a bevelled edge so they are easier to handle. Upon speaking to each, I discovered that Barbara has always loved crafts and making things, and enjoys being able to combine that with contributing to the new museum. Whereas Jackie, who started off volunteering in admin four years ago, moved into this more hands-on area as a way of challenging herself and enjoys being part of a wider team.
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Museum staff member Steve demonstrating a process for volunteers Barbara and Jackie
What I noticed most during my time in the workshop was the positivity. In the interactions between staff, volunteers, and contractors that the museum works with, and in the pride each shows in the job they are doing. This inclusive and productive atmosphere is just one reason why I would heartily recommend anyone interested in volunteering at Derby Museums to go to https://www.derbymuseums.org/support/getinvolved to see how you might be able to help with the creation of Derby’s Museum of Making.
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Volunteers Barbara and Jackie helping to create parts for drawer displays
Check back for more weekly posts from Oliver!
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derbysilkmill · 5 years ago
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An Update on the Model Railway from Oliver Taylor
A model railway has been a feature of Derby’s museums for nearly 70 years, having been originally unveiled in May 1951. First housed at the museum’s primary building on The Strand, it was then moved into the Silk Mill site when that became the city’s Industrial Museum in the 1970’s. Latterly it was rebuilt twice to better suit its new location. It is fondly remembered by many in Derby and the wider area, being many people’s first memory of the museum whilst on school trips and visits with family. The O-Gauge (1/43rd the size of real world) model was last seen publicly in late 2016, after which it was carefully disassembled and put into storage, due to the Silk Mill’s renovation beginning shortly thereafter.
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A photograph of the railway taken at its initial site inside the Museum and Art Gallery
The model railway itself is ‘set’ and themed around a fictional location in the Derbyshire countryside called Kirtley, during the summer of 1906. This name was chosen as it was the surname of the first Chief Mechanical Engineer of the Midland Railway, Matthew Kirtley. The scenes, trains, and practices depicted within the model were originally designed to resemble those of the Midland Railway itself, in a sense preserving them at a time. This at a time in the 1950’s, when the real railway beyond had just been nationalised, and was set to become more homogenous. During this period 60+ years ago, nearly all real passenger and freight trains in the East Midlands were still being hauled by steam locomotives. Thus, time has turned what was a manifestation of living memory then, into a 114-year-old time capsule in today’s world of diesel and ever-increasing electrification.
Currently, the jigsaw pieces that make up the model railway in its current form are being worked on at the warehouse where they are currently held, coincidentally a stone’s throw away from one of the railway lines leading out of Derby Station. That work is primarily being undertaken by volunteers, all passionate about the project, some arrive learned in model making and railway history, while others are eager to learn, and all are committed to seeing the project come to fruition when the model is installed into the new Museum of Making.
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Volunteer Annette is instructed in carving air-dry clay to mimic a section of dry-stone wall
A few weeks ago, I went to see the railway as it’s being worked on and talked to those people involved about what was happening. In essence there are two teams working on different parts of the model, one working on the scenery, buildings, and other objects that the trains will run through; and another whose job is to work on the parts less visible to the public, such as the layout’s structure and trackwork. Both have their’ work cut out, as the space in the museum where the end product will operate is both larger and shaped differently to how it was before, necessitating changes to the overall design to utilise that space better. Principally, the height of the model railway is being lowered, from around chest height to waist level. This means the space can forgo the raised viewing platform it used to have, letting children and the less abled have a better and unrestricted view of what’s going on. To do this involves the ‘behind the scenes’ team measuring and cutting to size every metal leg that holds up the railway’s wooden baseboards. Elsewhere others have been remodelling the track behind the backdrop, where trains complete their’ circuits and are stored and changed when not in use. Re-using as much of the pre-2016 trackwork and complex electrical wiring here as possible, as well as making sure each of the many lines fit together and works in its new position, is a hugely complex task. Getting it correct now however, as with the real-world railway, will make all the difference to the smooth running of the model.
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One of the structural legs being reassembled after cutting & a track point labelled and ready for reuse
The picturesque miniature landscapes that will make up the new Kirtley are also being reworked, with features and the positions of buildings (some dating back to the original 1950’s design) being moved relative to each other, or carefully altered to make a model that is both an accurate and visually pleasing depiction of Edwardian Derbyshire. These alterations also include making places where sections of landscape can be dropped out, so a person can appear from under the middle of the railway to reach anything (otherwise inaccessible from the edges) that may need attending to once the layout is reassembled.
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Resin and gravel being used to recreate waterways such as those found around Matlock and Dovedale
As a rail enthusiast myself, I loved and was fascinated by both researching the model railway’s history and context, and by the amount of forethought and workmanship that it will take to revive it for a fresh generation of visitors. I can’t wait to check up on it again soon.
Check back for more weekly posts from Oliver!
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derbysilkmill · 6 years ago
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Red Saunders’ Hidden Project - The casting!
A weekend of measuring, chatting and custard creams.
Over the weekend of Saturday 30th and Sunday 31st of March, ‘The Hidden Project’ saw almost 170 people (and Rolo the dog) come forward to be measured and photographed for a chance to be cast in Red Saunders’ ‘Hidden Project’ here in Derby.
Saturday
Saturday was an early start at the Silk Mill! Armed with cameras, tape measures, biscuits and a lot of enthusiasm, project volunteers arrived at 9am ready to greet Derby’s hopeful candidates. Abby, Lauren and Rico -Media Students from the University of Derby - took all the casting photographs over the weekend and worked solidly over the two days. 
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Volunteers Andy, Ruth and Emma were always around to provide a warm welcome, whilst Laura, Alice, Rebecca and I stepped outside our comfort zone, grabbed a measuring tape and took on the task of taking people’s measurements. Thanks to the brilliant tutelage of Tim Heywood from Derby Theatre, we soon got into the swing of things. As Alice commented ‘It is not often you spend a Saturday afternoon running a measuring tape round perfect strangers without someone asking questions about your behaviour...!’. Thankfully, all the people we measured were brilliant and accommodating – thank you everyone!
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One of the project photographs will be set at Rolls-Royce and it was wonderful to see so many employees of past and present attend the casting; whole families arrived to get involved! One person, who has lived in Derby and worked for Rolls-Royce for 8 years, commented that Derby had become ‘home to our newly expanded family and not just a place to stay for work’.
Talking to people throughout the day, it was clear that many wanted to be involved as a way to celebrate the City of Derby. It was a way to feel connected to Derby for many, whilst others wanted to feature in Red’s work to become part of the city’s history themselves, leaving an image of them within the museum. One person revealed that, for them, it was about bringing ‘back to life forgotten moments from the history of the people.’ Furthermore, there was a sense of putting Derby’s heritage firmly on the history map.
‘Derby has such wonderful heritage and I’m proud of our city.’
‘... too often we forget the great role Derby was playing in our national story and the Hidden project gives the chance for local people to celebrate this...’
‘Taking part in something that records Derbyshire’s really rich and important industrial heritage would be a privilege.’
Phew! We were all getting really excited by such brilliant responses at ‘Hidden’ HQ. We didn’t think it could get any better... and then came Rolo the dog. As the only canine participant, Rolo stole the show. He was brilliant in front of camera and was more than happy to receive the vast amounts of fuss bestowed upon him whilst his owner was photographed too.
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The afternoon, though quieter, was just as exciting and varied. Emma, one of the super volunteers, did an amazing job of spreading the word on the streets of Derby and many people turned up ad hoc to spend a slice of their sunny afternoon with us. We ended the day tired but happy. We had photographed, measured, chatted, and listened all day and now we were ready to pack down ready for tomorrow. Oh yes, and as volunteers we also suspect we set a world record for consumption of custard creams!
Sunday
Allenton, you did not disappoint us! Our second day of casting was at St Martin’s Church & Community Centre. Everyone there was really welcoming and looked after us brilliantly – we were really grateful! Thank you!
‘To be honest, I didn't know what to expect but I had a feeling in my gut that I had to take part and I'm so glad that I followed my gut instinct.’ – commented Ann, a brand new volunteer. We were chuffed that she, together with Lottie and Sue, chose Mother’s Day to take care of all the excited participants.
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Sunday saw several people who were involved with UNITE come forward to be involved. This added another perspective to the relevance of this project to Derby. People told us that one of their key reasons for involvement was that, as a social activist, they identified with the history behind the project. Another commented ‘It reminds us that things that we give for granted, such as a 5-days week at work, are achievements reached thanks to people fought before we were born.’ As someone who had not previously been aware of the national importance of events such as ‘The Lockout’ at Derby Mills (one of the settings for Red’s work,) I really began to feel the ‘hidden’ nature of the history we are dealing with through this project. Although I became a volunteer because of my interest in projects that fuse history and art in general, I found my connection to the project changing and becoming much more rooted to Derby itself.
For some, it really was all about trying something new and seeing how they could contribute. With no doubt, there was a strong sense of belonging and wanting to see what each individual could bring to the whole. As one person remarked ‘I bring me, a bit wrinkly but a real person.’
That, it would seem to me, is the best contribution. Thank you, Derby!
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We are hoping to let people know about those selected to the production by the end of April. Keep an eye out on our blog for further insights into production week!
By Claire Roe - Volunteer assisting the Hidden Project 
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derbysilkmill · 5 years ago
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The Big Move – A blog by Oliver Taylor
Last month I gave you an update on the model railway and what has been happening with it since it was last seen publicly in 2015. Visiting it in storage was a great opportunity to gain insights into how it works, and how it will fit into the story the Museum of Making is endeavouring to tell. As the model in its disassembled form rubs shoulders with artefacts and documents from the museum collection, work on it by the dedicated team of staff and volunteers has had to be rather piecemeal thus far. Hence, with renovation work on the Museum of Making progressing rapidly, they’ve been itching to get the railway moved back into the Silk Mill building, so greater headway can be made towards final assembly.
With the finished layout expected to be more than 15 metres long and 7 meters wide in overall dimensions, I went along on February 21st to see just how big of a job moving all the pieces would be.
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Jeff Mander and Peter Collins assess the space prior to the arrival of the model railway
Upon arriving at 10am, I caught up with project lead on the model railway Jeff Mander, and Head of Curatorship and Curator of Making Peter Collins, as they began scoping out the space on the second floor the model railway will inhabit. They went on to survey the route that boxes, boards, and other items would need to be navigated through. This would involve entering through the workshop on one side of the building and ending up where they were needed on the other side. At this stage, the only way for people to move between floors were tight U-shaped flights of stairs, this would necessitate some large heavier elements remaining temporarily on the ground floor until the installation of one of the lifts. As advanced as work is, the Silk Mill is still an active building site, meaning everyone going into it for the move would have to wear appropriate personal protection equipment.
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Part of the path cleared through the museum ready for the move
At the storage facility used by Derby Museums, the rest of the team had been painstakingly packaging the model railway and were now loading it into the first of a handful of lorry and van loads headed towards the Silk Mill. The first of these loads arrived at around 11am accompanied by around half a dozen museum staff and volunteers. With the complexity of the move, every item would have a written identity attached to it to help avoid any component going missing. These corresponded to several labels around the room on the second floor so that components could be found again easily and unpackaged in the most common-sense order.
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Top: One of many labelled boxes holding some of the thousands of small parts the model needs. Bottom: Halfway there – The first lorry load’s boards awaiting arrival into the Silk Mill
Over the course of the day, this load and a further two were carefully unloaded and transferred to where they were needed. At various points, the Derby Museums team discussed matters with the site’s construction firm Speller Metcalfe, and the removal company B.E. Webbe; and a representative from the museum workshop (which impressively was able to keep operating throughout the day). I was cheered to see how constructively everyone cooperated, each lending a hand at various points to help make the move as efficient as possible.
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Top: Two volunteers delicately move one of the more fragile boxes into the building. Bottom: A minor stumbling block averted as the group in the workshop help the team clear space for a larger item
Some of the most recognisable parts of the railway layout, and the last to leave the vans were the scenery sections, the large pieces that will be put together and will form the landscape trains will travel through. Their fragile nature meant these had to have specially constructed shelves built around them to enable their safe transportation. It was a little surreal to see these jigsaw pieces outside of their normal context as they crept around the building. Also interesting was seeing how many similarities there are between them and the products the workshop is making for the museum fit-out. An early indication of how these two areas will mesh and help each other along in future.
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Scenery sections are steadily walked out of the lorry and wait their turn to be moved up into their new home
There were so many parts to the model railway in fact, that despite the mammoth amount of work I saw undertaken during the move
on that day, the rest would have to being taken care of on a subsequent day. Even project leader Jeff, who has been living and breathing this project for months, was surprised at just how much there is when spread out properly. I too can’t wait to see the Museum of Making team piece the model railway together over the next few months.
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Top: The underside of one of the track boards, showing the complex wiring needed for each section. Bottom: The heavier structural sections in their temporary place on the ground floor
Check back for more weekly posts from Oliver!
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derbysilkmill · 5 years ago
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A Multitude of Books - Collection Sorting for the Museum of Making. A blog by Oliver Taylor
Earlier this week I was invited to Derby Museum and Art Gallery to observe a small snippet of the raft of work that the collections team are doing in the lead up to the opening of Museum of Making in September. Museum curatorial staff were starting the process of sorting through the many books and bound volumes that were in the old Industrial Museum at the Silk Mill before renovation work started.
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Currently these books are at the main Museum and Art Gallery site. I found them in a fitting location, the wing of the building that formerly housed Derby Central Library. Stored in around 30 identical cardboard boxes, they were firstly being divided into rough groups based on topic, and then carefully placed on shelves ready for being examined and organised more precisely.
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The shelves are some of those still in situ from the old library and are protected as part of the building’s Grade II listed status. Those facing into the room, now a multi-function space hire able for events, display various interesting and decorative objects belonging to the museum. While those that aren’t public facing, are being used to temporarily hold the books I had come to see. Although all of the books belong to Derby Museums, some are explicitly museum objects, such as manuals for railway locomotives built at Derby Works and articles documenting the museums’ own history. Being parts of the formal collection, these need to be tallied and moved accordingly. The rest of the number cover a wide array of areas including periodicals discussing transport, engineering, and scale modelling; historical texts relating to Derby’s Industrial heritage, and more general pieces with a regional interest. Some have obvious relevance to Museum of Making, discussing materials technology or the histories of local firms, whereas others may have meant to have gone into the primary museum and been misplaced sometime in the past.
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Of particular interest to me was a small booklet produced by Derby Museum and Art Gallery in the early 1950’s. It discusses what was then called the ‘Midland Railway Exhibit’, now more commonly know as the model railway, and the methods with which it was constructed. Included within this were passages setting the exhibit within its historical context, and small descriptions of each locomotive that featured in the model, rather like a theatre programme.
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The sorting and cataloguing of these books will take some time, and there is as yet no firm plan for their future, but I was assured that Derby Museums’ staff are working hard to find a publicly accessible place for them in the future, and I myself will be first in the queue to have a better look at them.
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derbysilkmill · 5 years ago
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Hello, I’m Oliver Taylor...
Hello, I’m Oliver Taylor, and I’m working as an intern for Derby Museums and the Museum of Making. I discovered this opening late last year after graduating from Commercial Photography at the University of Derby. I seized upon it as both a chance to develop skills I’ve already learnt in a real-world documentary context, and as someone with a great personal enthusiasm for Derby’s industrial heritage. Spawned from a passion for good design, engineering, and manufacture, as well as having family who have worked in said industries.
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Earlier this month, I participated in a hard hat tour of the Silk Mill site with National Lottery supporters, to look at the work being done to rebuild it into the new Museum of Making. I went both as a photographer, collecting images of the work in progress and of the tour itself; and as a visitor in my own right eager to see how things are progressing and where they might lead.
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The most striking area we looked at was what will become the Civic Hall. A triple height glass & steel structure at the western side of the building, it will act as an inviting ‘shop window’ for the museum’s activities, housing public works and a seated café area. Crowning the space, will be a Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 turbofan jet engine hung from the ceiling. At around 12 feet across, it grabs your attention even now when covered during the building work. It represents both the power and expertise of Derby’s present, and a link to the museum’s own past, being sited close to where one of its RB211 predecessors formerly stood.
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Upon walking through the rest of building, I was repeatedly excited to see the way that floors and areas were being sympathetically reworked and re-purposed to securely show a great deal more of the Museum of Making’s collections (100% will be accessible versus less than 10% previously) to their’ best advantage. A fresh approach to how some of the permanent collections will be displayed really interested me. Arranging objects by material taxonomy (What they are made of.), means that superficially very different things, from very different time periods can be juxtaposed next to each other. For instance, a Crown Derby plate could be placed next to a Formula One car’s carbon-ceramic brake disc 250+ years its’ junior.
Overall, I came away very encouraged to see what a thoughtful and methodical job is being done in renovating the Silk Mill site into a new Museum of Making for the city, and I’m very much looking forward to being part of it by continuing to help record its development in the future.
Click here to watch a video from the day
Check back for more weekly posts from Oliver!
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derbysilkmill · 6 years ago
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21st Century Engine Installed in the Museum of Making
Rolls-Royce have generously donated a Trent 1000 engine to the Museum of Making and recently it was winched into place. As part of the new approach we are using to deliver the capital project, the Alliance team are continually looking for ideas to create efficiencies and better ways of working. One of these ideas was to install the engine into the new Civic Hall just after the steelwork was completed and then finish the building around the engine. This innovation has saved both time and cost! 
Check out our short film about the installation process here. Filmed by Speller Metcalfe. 
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derbysilkmill · 6 years ago
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We’re so excited about the progress of the new roof apex and glass windows to the front of the building from April to July 2019! This space will enable an outstanding and unique view from the building and bring natural light into the new top floor spaces. It also enables us to bring the lift up one more floor than previously possible, making the building fully accessible. 
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derbysilkmill · 6 years ago
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Derby company Smith of Derby has been helping the Museum of Making project by restoring a clock with their apprentices. See the full article here https://www.derbymuseums.org/news/apprentices-restore-historic-clock-for-the-new-museum-of-making
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