The Scotsman

Students bring textile treasures back to life

- Brian Ferguson Arts & Culture Correspond­ent

Forgotten and fragile textile treasures up to 200 years old are being brought “back to life” thanks to painstakin­g clean-up operations to allow them to be showcased after a £45 million heritage project is unveiled.

A new generation of expert conservato­rs is working on a project to transform items of clothing which were previously covered in decades of dirt and soot into new star exhibits for the revamped Paisley Museum.

A number of items of clothing, which were previously kept in storage facilities, have already undergone specialist work at Glasgow University, which is home to the UK’S only textile conservati­on post-graduate programme.

A child’s dress and bonnet, a crinoline “cage skirt” and a knitted woollen water polo uniform are among the recently-transforme­d objects, which will be going on public display when the attraction reopens later this year.

The museum, which dates back to 1871 when it was gifted to the town by industrial­ist Sir Peter Coats, is undergoing a radical transforma­tion and expansion that will see twice as many objects on display as it did before work began.

Work includes the creation of a west wing extension, new gallery and exhibition spaces, and a new cafe.

At the heart of the new-look museum – which has been billed as “Scotland’s biggest cultural heritage project” – will be a celebratio­n of centuries of textile production in the town and the global reach of the Paisley pattern.

Around 1,200 of the famous shawls are in Paisley Museum’s collection, along with looms, spinning equipment, pattern and design books, and weaving technology. Its dress and textiles collection features garments, accessorie­s and household textiles.

Student Caitlin Hartmann, who has worked on some of the pieces going on display in the museum, said: “I was phenomenal­ly happy with the results achieved … I was grateful for the trust Paisley Museum put in me to achieve these results.”

Sarah Foskett, programme co-convenor at the university’s Kelvin Centre for Conservati­on and Cultural Heritage Research, said: “I have never seen objects clean as well. There’s a lot of satisfacti­on comes from that, and the longterm preservati­on of these pieces and enabling the object to have a new lease of life.

“Textiles are really rich sources of evidence as you get a direct link to the past – people wore these pieces and they have stories.”

Programme co-convenor Karen Thompson added: “By preserving these objects, it gives the opportunit­y for people in the future to learn from them. Conservati­on is about stabilisin­g and requires a lot of decision making.”

Anotheroft­hestudents,hannah Lacaille, said: “It’s always exciting to see evidence of use in an object because one can better imagine the lives of the people who used it.

“I’ll be proud to be able to say I took part in making this happen, in a way that’s safe for the object, so that it may be displayed for generation­s to come.”

People wore these pieces and they have stories Sarah Foskett

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 ?? ?? Clockwise from main: Hannah Lacaille has been working on the Paisley Museum project; Sarah Foskett and Karen Thompson, programme co-convenors; cotton sleeves transforme­d by experts.
Clockwise from main: Hannah Lacaille has been working on the Paisley Museum project; Sarah Foskett and Karen Thompson, programme co-convenors; cotton sleeves transforme­d by experts.

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