August Tuesday Talk—Sewn in America: Making – Meaning – Memory

August Tuesday Talk—Sewn in America: Making – Meaning – Memory

Tuesday Talk by DAR Museum Curator Alden O'Brien will formally present on the current exhibition

By DAR Museum

Date and time

Tuesday, August 13 · 12 - 1pm EDT

Location

DAR Museum

1776 D Street NW Washington, DC 20006

About this event

  • 1 hour

Sewn objects surround us. They clothe us from birth, cover our bodies day and night, furnish our living spaces, line our coffins. For over 40,000 years humans have sewn by hand (and for a mere 180, by machine as well). Until recently, every woman and many men knew how to sew for utilitarian and often decorative purposes. Knowing a variety of techniques and stitches, and which to use for a given task, was key knowledge imparted in childhood and employed throughout a lifetime.

Curator Alden O’Brien will formally present on this groundbreaking exhibit, combining sewn items from all textile sections of the DAR Museum’s collections: clothing, household textiles, quilts, and needlework.

Speaker: Alden O’Brien, Curator of Costumes and Textiles at the DAR Museum

The event is free, but pre-registration is requested. This event is taking place in-person but will be streaming online.

Register virtually here: https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/9417020520749/WN_USZQdVaFTGOu77s8eBqx2g

Organized by

Want to see what Americans kept in their homes 200 years ago? The DAR Museum collection includes furniture, dishes, wall art, textiles, and a few weird odds and ends. Just like your home (but our stuff is probably older).

If you're in Washington D.C., stop by and see us!

Free