The National Wool Museum, located in Drefach Felindre, Llandysul, Carmarthenshire is part of Amgueddfa Cymru – National Museum Wales. Continue reading... From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Attraction Location
National Wool Museum Videos
Drawing out the collection by Julia Griffiths Jones
This film is about my latest work, commissioned by and exhibited at the National Wool Museum Drefach Felindre, Wales. This is a series of 5 pieces inspired by the museum's collection.
Traditional handmade Weaving on Dobcross looms.
Taken at the National Wool Museum of Wales, Drefach Felindre. Listen to the noise of the old traditional looms, no mass production here, all handmade. And look at iconic Welsh tapestry blankets being woven. Just amazing.
The weaving of Welsh Blankets and the Welsh woollen manufacturing industry in general was historically one of the most important industries in all parts of Wales. However it was in the Teifi valley in what is now Ceredigion and it's neighbouring counties of north Pembrokeshire and Carmarthenshire that the wool industry was at its most prolific during the latter parts of the 19th and 20th century.
Wool industry in Wales | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:02:12 1 Process 00:04:12 2 Prehistoric to early medieval times 00:06:36 3 Medieval period 00:11:39 4 Foreign trade 00:16:16 5 Industrial era 00:16:26 5.1 North Wales 00:19:16 5.2 Mid-Wales 00:24:16 5.3 South Wales 00:27:56 6 Today 00:28:57 7 See also
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SUMMARY
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The woollen industry in Wales was at times the country's most important industry, though it often struggled to compete with the better-funded woollen mills in the north of England, and almost disappeared during the 20th century. There is continued demand for quality Welsh woollen products. Wool processing includes removing the fleece by shearing, classing the wool by quality, untangling, carding and spinning it into yarn, which may be knitted or woven into cloth, then finishing the cloth by fulling, napping and pressing. Spinning and weaving of sheep's wool dates to prehistoric times in Wales, but only became an important industry when Cistercian monasteries were established in the 12th century. Water-powered fulling mills to finish the cloth enabled rapid expansion of the industry in the 13th century, although spinning and weaving continued to be a cottage industry. In the early 16th century production shifted from south Wales to mid and north Wales. The Shrewsbury Drapers Company in England took a dominant role in distributing Welsh cloth. From the 18th century there was strong demand for cheap, sturdy Welsh material shipped from Bristol, Liverpool or the Welsh ports to clothe slaves in the British colonies of North America and the West Indies. During the Industrial Revolution the Welsh woollen industry was slow to mechanize compared to the mills of northern England. When railways reached mid Wales in the 1860s they brought a flood of cheap mass-produced products that destroyed the local industry. However, development of the South Wales Coalfield opened a growing market for woollen products from water-powered mills in the south west, which prospered until after World War I. At one time there were more than 300 working wool mills. The industry went into steady decline after World War I, and only a few mills continue to operate.