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Friday, July 9, 2010

Spinning Sepia Saturday Week 31

I share another mystery this week with this photo of a young woman, date unknown sitting  at an empty spinning wheel. Since there is no  wool nor cotton wad (what would they call the stuff in process?) on the wheel to be spun into threads or yarns, I assume this photo was posed.

I rescued this lady of the past from my aunt's basement in PA last  year when clearing out her home.  I know it belonged to my Uncle John Irwin and I believe it is the same spinning wheel which we inherited from Uncle John and brought from PA and which sits silently  in the corner of the study today.   Several other places on this  blog I have written some about my Uncle John Irwin and his family, most recently  on March 2, 2010 about our Red Dragon Chair, also inherited from Uncle John Irwin. The following link can take you there or you can look at March, 2010 on the Archive sidebar on the left and click on Our Red Dragon.    http://patonlinenewtime.blogspot.com/2010/03/our-red-dragon.html

This photo is in an old wooden frame, (you can see part  of it in the photo above) covered with glass but not in very good condition, somewhat faded. Removing it from the frame to scan would have been more of a challenge  than I was  prepared to tackle, so rather than scan, I took a picture of it.  The heavy wooden  frame is sealed on the back and  enhanced with old nails bent over into the frame.

I think this  spinner woman is an ancestor of Uncle John's mother,  whose photo I share here,  always known to me as Mrs. Irwin, Jessie Ayers Irwin was quite the grand dame, you can detect  in her photo, that grandness, elegance which frightened me as a youngster who had to behave strictly in her prescence.    Jessie Ayers Irwin whose family traces back to the Revolutionary War, well so do the Irwins, traveled extensively and had many treasures in her home, but she especially liked those from her own heritage.  I recall the spinner photo from Mrs. Irwin's home when I visited her as a  young child; it hung above the spinning wheel which she said was very old and used by her ancestors.   Some day the  photo of the Spinning Lady and the wheel itself will make it's way back to the Irwins,  through Chris, John's grandson, who found me through this blog and the Dragon tale.  We met in PA in May and I was able to give him family mementoes of the grandfather he never knew.  But that is another tale that centers on the wonders of the internet.

It is really is a Sepia print in prime and maybe others have ideas as to the age of the photo.  I took some of the spinning wheel today where it rests quietly, in it's retirement. There have been some repairs to it over the years, but  Jerry who examines all antiques and especially anything made of wood is convinced this wheel must date back to  late 1700's.

 Oh if it could tell the stories of  previous activity!

As always click on the title to this post to go to other Sepia posts from our international community.

11 comments:

  1. Don't you love a mystery? but then it has you guessing. The women in the photos were both very beautiful. Maybe one day you will learn more.

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  2. Thank youCrystal Mary, I think I need to edit my post. The 2nd photo is Jessie, Mrs. Irwin. It's the spinner whom I can't identify..

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  3. The photo of the spinner is very ethereal and ghostly. It would make a great book cover.

    Kat

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  4. Wow! What treasures, to have both the photo and the wheel. Priceless! The photograph is just beautiful. Does the wheel still work? There are no cords on it to drive the wheel, but that doesn't mean it wouldn't work, of course. It's hard to tell from the photo (which doesn't open in a new window and therefore doesn't enlarge) whether there's wool on the bobbin or not. If she were spinning wool, she would have been holding a rolag - wool carded so the strands are relatively straight, then rolled into a tube. I don't know if there's a way to find out who the lady is, but it would be thrilling for a known descendant to have the photo and the wheel.

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  5. Poetikat, thanks for the idea, a book cover it will be someday!

    Nancy, The wheel does work, and my aunt Virginia who was so industrious had it spinning at one time. something way beyond my capability. I sent her a scarf when we lived in CA of yarn spun by a woman who raised goats and sheep and sheared the sheep for their wool. Thereafter my aunt got some sheared wool and spun it on this very wheel that would have been in the early 90's. Thanks for the name, rolag. Doesn't it almost sound like something used to verify on the post a comments? Yes, I agree both the photo and the wheel are treasures.

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  6. I agree with Nancy. What a treasure to have both photo and wheel. And they're both beautiful. It's so interesting that you found and visited a relative that you found through your blog. I think we all wish for those types of connections.

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  7. A Spinning wheel or Early Time-Machine!:)
    What A Splendid Photo.Thank You.

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  8. doesn't it feel a bit odd to have something in your possession and see it in such an old picture. kind of eerely...
    :)~
    HUGZ

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  9. Tony, I hadn't though of how the wheel ties into the time machine on Alan's post, right you are!

    Ticklebear, Yes, and it allows me to imagine all sorts of tales.

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  10. Pat, what great heirlooms, and how fun that a relative found you through your blog. laurie

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  11. Wonderful post. I certainly think the spinning wheel is the same as the one in the photograph and I suspect that the photograph is genuinely old - a true sepia rather than one which has been mocked up. A marvelous post.

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