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Sunday, June 30, 2019

An Interview with Gloria Nelson


Hello again, Friends.  I'm going to cut short my customary prattle and to introduce to you someone I have met in person and consider a good friend.  I thought with Canada Day being tomorrow, I would introduce to you someone Canadian who has made quite a mark on our tatting community.

Her name is Gloria Nelson.  She lives in a small community in Northern Ontario, Canada.  I have seen this woman's work and held it in my hands and it is absolutely exquisite.  She has the biggest heart and just loves to help people with whatever tatting questions they might have.

I asked her a series of questions (via email; she lives in Ontario and I live in Saskatchewan. A person-to-person interview was simply not possible) and she kindly indulged my snoopy nature.  I thought originally I would paraphrase her answers in the interest of brevity, but I thought we’d all get a better “feel” for who this Gloria person is in her own words.  Here are my questions and her answers:

  1.   How long have you been tatting?
    I started tatting in 1999.

  2.   What first drew you to learn?
   I saw a doily in an artisan boutique in Ste-Flavie, QC,       Canada while on vacation and knew it was not crochet or   knit.  I bought it and asked my husband’s grandmother what it was.  She said “frivolité” (the French word for “tatting”).  The woman who made the doily was 85 years old at the time.  Her name was written on the blue cardstock that the doily was attached to: “Marie-Ange Castonguay”.  I became so determined to learn how to make this beautiful “frivolité”!

  3.   How did you learn; did you have a teacher?
      I had a "Learn How" book for knitting and crochet at home and always ignored the tatting section at the back.  But after buying the doily at the artisan boutique, I found my book in my craft room and read the whole tatting section.  I found a shuttle at the store and started to teach myself to shuttle tat.  I made a few things but found the instructions in the book very vague.  So I went to the local library and they had the "Learn Needle Tatting Step-by-Step" book by Barbara Foster.  I went home with that book and fell in love with needle tatting.

4.   Needle, shuttle, both?  Why?
   I am primarily a needle tatter and make all of my things with needle.  I can shuttle tat the basics.  I always felt more naturally comfortable with the needle so decided to focus on that tool and learn as much as I can.

    5.   What do you get from this artform?
I enjoy knowing that I am continuing a fibre art into a new generation. I like the challenge of reading antique patterns and tatting them with the needle techniques. I enjoy the delicate threads passing across my fingers. For me, tatting can he very peaceful and meditative... or it can be a creative challenge.

   6.   Are any other family members tatters?       
        I found out that my grandmother tatted.  She passed away when I was only a baby, so I never knew her.  When my aunt found out I was tatting, she mailed to me her mother's tatting shuttle.  It still had pink thread on the bobbin from the last thing she made.  It's precious to me.  You can see where her fingers grasped the shuttle - the metal is worn.  It's the only family member that I know of who tatted.  But I wonder where my grandmother learned it from...maybe her mother?  It would be interesting to know...


  7.   Do you have an online “presence”; a blog or facebook  page you’d like to see folks visit more?
Visit my Facebook Page: "Sparkling Light Creation Studio - Tatting by Gloria Nelson" Check out my Instagram: "sparkling.light.cs" And Pinterest: "Sparkling Light Creation Studio"

   8.   Have you published any books or patterns, designed  any gadgets or developed any techniques?
Tatting Tools: I am the original designer of the "Bare Thread Space and Picot Tool". It helps a tatter to make consistent lengths of Bare Thread Space and perfect picots! My tool is the only one with special slots to hold rings in place while making Bare Thread Space. It makes it so much easier to do! More information can be found here: https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=1375953805846889&id=724059564369653



I have published individual patterns (you can see them on my Facebook Page in the Photo Album section, on Instagram, and Pinterest). And for books - well, I am currently working on one. It's too early to give any details but check my Facebook page for more information.


  9. Does your family support your art?  What kinds of accommodations do they make?
My family is very supportive of my tatting. They understand that I have a passion for making it and teaching about it.

10.What does tatting do for you?
     While I am tatting, I am in a meditative space.  I am in the creative and artistic part of my brain where I get lost in the stitches, the counting, the rhythm of sliding the thread, the beautiful colours.  In today's world, we need that place to unwind, relax, and just breathe.  I get that when I tat.  When I'm not actually tatting, but am still doing things related to tating (updating my Facebook page, drawing a pattern on the computer, filling orders, sending shipments, etc.), my mind is engaged and busy with what I enjoy.  It's a good place to be.

11.Have you entered competitions? Shows? Anything you’d like to brag about?
I was a Featured Artist at the Espanola Fibre Arts Festival* in 2016. The Introduction to Needle Tatting workshops I taught were so much fun! I have entered tatted pieces in the Fall Fair for my community and received ribbons and Judge's Choice awards. There is another announcement coming soon - you will have to check my Facebook Page for that information!

* Espanola Fibre Arts Festival in 2016, located in Espanola, Ontario, Canada.

 12. What do you hope to accomplish with your art?
I want to help tatting to advance and be made by future generations. I want to encourage beginner needle tatters to become the best needle tatters they can be! With the correct tools and tutorials, they can make quality handmade lace. I want to inspire non-tatters to consider learning, or to just look at tatting with admiration that all of it is made with just one stitch (the double stitch) and to realize that tatting is NOT a "lost art".

13. Is there anything you DON’T like about tatting?
I don't like knots in the thread where they're not supposed to be!  :o)

I also don't like the rivalry that sometimes happens amongst tatters about needle vs. shuttle. They are only the tools used to carry a thread to make the same end product: handmade lace with double stitches, rings, chains, and picots. Tatting is tatting. The double stitch doesn't care about what tool makes it... it's just happy to be made into something beautiful. :o)

14. Have you taught others to tat?  Are any of your family members interested in learning?
I have taught many people to needle tat in classes around my community, and at workshops at the fibre arts festival.  I hope I have taught more about needle tatting wiht the tips and tutorial sheets I share on my Facebook page, Instagram and Pinterest accounts., and have shared in the many Facebook groups in which I participate.  And unfortunately, nobody in my immediate family tats.  I have teenage sons who prefer playing baseball, and other creative family members who prefer drawing and painting over any of the fibre arts I enjoy.

15. Where do you see this artform in general in, say, 20 years?
In 20 years, I hope tatting will have more groups that gather together in person, on a regular basis, in communities worldwide.  The knitters and crocheters have their weekly gatherings at local yarn shops.  Let's have the tatters do that, too (and get more local shops to stock tatting thread and supplies!).  I also hope that tatters and artists will blend together and use tatting in works of art.  Tatting is not just about Grandma's doilies on a shiny living room table.  Tatting can be incorporated creatively into many forms of art and i would like to see that happen more.

And in 20 years, I want to be able to walk into any craft store and when I ask where the tatting supplies are, the salesperson will actually say "Follow me, they're over here" instead of the "Tatta what?!?" response I get today.

On a personal note, I know Gloria to be a warm, inviting, intelligent, talented woman with a wonderful sense of humour who will help you in any way she can.  I extend an invitation to you to go visit her Facebook page, or go explore her Instragram or Pinterest accounts.  You would  be amazed at the collection of resources she has accumulated that are applicable to both shuttle and needle tatting.  

The best thing about Gloria?  She's 100% born and bred CANADIAN!!

Happy Canada Day, m'Dears!


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