Armley Weave cloth range up for top award

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Traditional Yorkshire flat caps created using an Armley museum’s vintage looms could be in line for a top national arts award.

The classic White Rose county headgear is part of the Armley Weave range, which uses cloth produced on the historic equipment at Leeds Industrial Museum at Armley Mills, once home to the largest woollen mill in the world.

The Association of Cultural Enterprise has named the Armley Weave range as a finalist in the prestigious ACE Best Product Awards for 2018, with the winners set to be announced in Brighton on March 1.

The range of products was created to support a project between Yorkshire Textiles and Armley Mills, who teamed up to produce their own bespoke cloth in a bid to showcase the mill’s fascinating textile heritage.

Developed by Laxtons Specialist Yarns in Yorkshire, the resulting luxurious British wool yarn cloth has also been used to make items including cushions, flasks, keyrings and hot water bottles.

Sarah Barton, keeper at Leeds Industrial Museum, said:

“We’re all immensely proud to have received this nomination and to be continuing the long tradition of Yorkshire textiles manufacturing, which began here hundreds of years ago and which was such a pivotal part of Leeds’s industrial heritage.

“The Armley Weave project was designed to pay tribute to the pioneers who, through ingenuity, determination and good, old-fashioned hard graft, made Leeds and Yorkshire so synonymous with textile excellence.”

The museum’s traditional looms are part of a spectacular array of vintage textile equipment on display at the site, some of which is still operational.

Armley Mills was built in 1805 by Benjamin Gott and was once the world’s largest woollen mill. Production there ended in 1969 and the site opened as Leeds Industrial Museum in 1982.



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