
2025 Open House at Thistle Hill Weavers

Textile History Forum 2025 Press Release
Friday, August 1
Saturday, August 2
Sunday, August 3
Contact: Rabbit Goody, Thistle Hill Weavers, (518) 284-2729, rabbitgoodythw@gmail.com
Held bi-annually at The Weavers Croft in Marshfield, Vermont, the Textile History Forum is a unique space for those working on research–both academics and non-academics–to present in-person and receive feedback from fellow researchers.
Plus, there’s plenty of good food and good fun.
“I always think of it as a big lunch,” said Rabbit Goody of Thistle Hill Weavers in Cherry Valley, New York, the Forum’s founder. Kate Smith hosts the event at her farm. “There’s no other place where people can get together and talk about their research, ask questions, and maybe expand their knowledge,” Goody said.
“I love weaving, but what I enjoy most is getting people together to talk about their research. At the Textile History Forum, there are a lot of opportunities to connect one-on-one with all of the presenters over the three days, not just at their presentations.”
The 2025 Forum will run Friday, August 1-Sunday, August 3. You can register now at ThistleHillWeavers.com or by mail: Thistle Hill Weavers, 101 Chestnut Ridge Road, Cherry Valley, NY 13320, (518) 284-2729. For more information, email at rabbitgoodythw@gmail.com
This year’s keynote speaker will be Michael Nix, British historian and author of “Norwich Textiles: A Global Story 1750-1840,” which won the East Anglian Book Award for History and Tradition in 2023. Nix was also a contributing author to “The Exeter Cloth Dispatch Book 1763-1765” which won the Academic Award for the Best Book on Devon’s History in 2022.
Also this year, Norman Kennedy, who founded the Marshfield School of Weaving in 1975, will be honored at Saturday’s lunch.
In-person cost for the three days is $275 and includes lunch and dinner on Saturday, keynote address, and lunch on Sunday. Registration includes a copy of the proceedings.
There is an opportunity to Zoom some of the in-person presentations. Zoom registration is $75 and includes paper presentations and the keynote address. Copies of the Proceedings will be available to Zoom registrants for the cost of postage.
Presenting at the 2025 Forum will be:
Friday
Susan E. Picinich–1830s Corset Work.
Peggy Hart–Wool Quilts as a Record of Historic Fabric.
Liyuan Dai–The Effect of Iconoclasm on Textiles in the Byzantine Era.
Maggie D’Aversa–Tracing the Remnants of the Rhode Island Slave Trade.
Saturday
Anna Whitaker–Weaving and the Woolen Industry of Clearfield Co., Pennsylvania During the 19th Century.
Sandra Rux–Silas Burton: Weaver, Reed Maker, and Teacher in Stratford, Connecticut, Prospering in the New Republic.
Dr. Mathilde Frances Lind–Arrowcraft and the Appalachian Weaving Revival in Gatlinburg, TN, 1925-1962.
Frances Richardson–Betsy Morton’s Recipe Book, c. 1845.*
Patrick Malone & Gray Fitzsimons–Incremental Innovation on the Shop Floor: The Unexamined Role of Loom Fixers and Weavers.
Steve Dunwell–Photographs of Mill Workers.
Andrea Myklebust & Kristina Bielenberg–Warp Weighted Loom Use in Norway in History and Now.
Lori Triplett–Early Indigo Resist Textiles from Bermuda.
Michael Nix, keynote speaker, Author of “Norwich Textiles: A Global Story 1750-1850.”
Sunday
Cornelia Frisbee Houde–Importance of Clothing to the Historical Narrative.
Michele Phillips Carmel–Anu Raud: Estonian Weaver and Poet.
Mac Whatley–The Roots of the American Power-Loom.
Michelle Amos–Lou Tate and the Evolution of the Little Loomhouse.
Sergio Emilio Tapia–Experimental Weaving in Santa Maria del Tule, Oaxaca, Mexico.
* Work in Progress
What is the Textile History Forum?
The Textile History Forum is an academic meeting that brings together textile historians, students, researchers, museum curators, independent scholars, artisans, dealers, and collectors. Research papers are published in the Proceedings, available the day of the Forum. Authors retain copyright on all printed publications and are free to publish their work in other venues.
Textile History Forum 2025

To register, click here.
Upcoming workshops and classes in 2025

I rarely get the opportunity to write a newsy letter from Thistle Hill Weavers, but 2025 has found me at the computer in the office ready to get started on the New Year.
I also hardly ever get to introduce the crew here at Thistle Hill Weavers: Raina Roe, Dan Myrick, Holly Oakley, Crystal Wack, Lisbeth Ruggeri, and Betty Muscarella. The crew here is really the heart and soul of Thistle Hill Weavers and although often less visible than I am, they are the weavers and finishers who get the job done.
We have some interesting projects ahead of us this year in addition to the upholstery fabrics for our long time clients we are working on two projects for Hyde Hall – George Clarke’s bed hangings and Anne’s bed hangings and carpet.
We are finishing up the silk damask for the Fulford House in Canada and some private client damasks for window treatments.
I will be teaching a few workshops this year here at the mill, and at Kilts Farm in Stone Arabia, New York, and Historic Eastfield Village in Nassau, New York.
But the BIG NEWS for those of you interested in textile history is this year’s Textile History Forum to be held August 1, 2 and 3 in Marshfield VT at Kate Smith’s Weavers Croft.
We have invited Michael Nix from England to be our keynote speaker this year. Michael’s book on Norwich Textiles: A Global Study 1750 to 1840. is helpful to understanding the production of worsted cloths that were so much a part of the 18th and 19th century.

Workshops and classes in 2025
Design and Drafting Patterns for Handweavers
February 15th and 16th
9:30-4:00
This is class for hand weavers who want to understand weave structure and pattern formulas.
This is not a weaving workshop, instead, we will be drafting patterns and weave structures on graph paper and computers. Understanding of how the intersection of threads work to form useful structures allows us to create our own patterns and textiles that serve both as beautiful fabrics but also meet our needs for drape and durability. The goal of this class is for students to be able to design their own patterns using weave formulas rather than printed drafts..
A bibliography will be sent ahead of the class. Lunch is included. Class is limited to six students. $125
Historic Textile Workshop: Reading Historic Weaver’s Drafts and Examining Historic Textiles
March 22nd and 23rd
This is a hands on work shop, a combination of reading and interpreting the weaving recipes left by fancy weavers and vernacular weavers and examining historic coverlets woven using these drafts.
There are so many different short hand methods of recording threading and treadling patterns. We will look at styles that became the backbone of American hand weaving in the colonial revival and styles that are unusual.
Lunch is included. Class is limited to 10 students. $125
Spin, Span, Spun at Historic Eastfield Village
June 14th and 15th
Spinning Straw into Gold or Spinning on traditional spinning wheels.
Do you own a traditional spinning wheel?
This workshop is geared to folks who are already familiar with spinning but want to improve their knowledge of traditional spinning techniques and the care of traditional wheels.
Saturday we will work on treadle and flyer wheels (low wheels, flax wheels). We will get your spinning wheel running if it needs some work and we will break, and heckle flax and dress distaffs for spinning linen.
Sunday we will work with walking wheels (great wheels, wool wheels) and spin wool and cotton.
We will look at different accelerating heads that were available in the 19th century.
Previous spinning knowledge is preferred as we will not have enough time to be able to teach beginning spinning. However, if you have a wheel but don’t know how it works and want to get your wheel in good condition please join us.
This workshop will be held at Historic Eastfield Village, Nassau NY
Bring Your Spinning Wheels – Opening Day at Kilts Farm, Stone Arabia, NY
MAY 18th
Calling all spinners, traditional and modern…come spin for the day at Kilts Farm.
Join me and enjoy showing the public the variety of our wheels in motion.
It’s Time For Our Open House!

For more information on our Open House or on the Textile History Forum, please call or email us at:
email: rabbitgoodythw@gmail.com
phone: 518.284.2729
Call For Papers for the Textile History Forum 2025

email: rabbitgoodythw@gmail.com
phone: 518.284.2729
Over Run Sale Now Also Online!

Sometimes we weave more cloth than ordered so that we can offer our smaller one-of-a-kind pieces to you!
We will be having an in-person sale on July 20th at our Mill in Cherry Valley, NY. But if you can’t make it to visit us, shop from home on our website. We have a variety of designs and sizes of carpets, perfect for hallways and stairs. And fabric by the yard ready to be turned into something beautiful!
We’re Having a Sale!

Thistle Hill Weavers Over Run Fabric, Carpet and Yarn Sale
Save the date: Saturday, July 20, 9:30am to 4:30pm
We are over stocked with our historic fabrics. Please help us out, we would like to clear off some shelves!
We have our historic carpets, worsted and silk fabrics, some small pieces of fuzzy bling, all at discounted prices.
We will also have yarn for sale. When we cannot use the ends of cones, or we are finished with a project we have boxes of yarn left over. Ready and waiting for for your creative talents!
Upcoming Events
June 22nd and 23rd: Dating and Identifying Historic Everyday Fabrics. Still a few spots left.
Sanborn Mills Farm, Loudon New Hampshire
sanbornmills.org
July 13th and 14th: Timber Frame Loom Workshop. Help set up a barn frame loom at Kilts Farm and learn about styles and differences in looms in the 18th century.
Kiltsfarm.org
August 2nd,3rd, 4th: Textile Tool Technology: What makes a spinning wheel work and what happens when water power changes the method of production. Three day seminar with hands on textile tools and textiles.
Eastfeld Village Nassau, New York
historiceastfield.org
September 13th: Woven Clothing Fabrics in early 19th Century Quilts
AQSA ,Tarrytown NY.
Americanquiltstudygroup.org
September 28th: Bring a textile discovery day at Kilts Farm. Our version of Antiques Roadshow. We learn so much from the textiles that we have been passed down through the generations.
Kiltsfarm.org
October 4th: What were coverlet weavers also weaving? The other fabrics mentioned in weavers ads.
Zoom lecture thru the coverlet study group.
Contact Marty Schlabach: mls5@cornell.edu
October 5th: The Gleich Lecture at the Arkell Museum and Library, Canajoharie NY.
arkellmuseum.org
November 3rd: Dating and Identifying Historic Textiles at Historic Deerfield, Worcester, MA. Lecture and Zoom. Bring a textile to identify.
historic-deerfield.org
December 7th and 8th: Open House here at Thistle Hill Weavers!
We are so excited! Our new video is live!
See it on our video page or on Youtube.
We are so excited to share not just our looms in action, but also where you can see our work in historic sites. Featured in the video are, The Emily Dickinson Museum, Hyde Hall, Cedar Grove, and Schuyler Mansion.
The video was created by Longbow Media.

