Showing 269 items
matching textile manufacturing
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Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Text Book, Introduction to Polymer Chemistry, D. Margerison & G.C. East
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Laboratory, Lab Reference - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDELight Brown soft cover book with Black Molecular Structure Diagram on coverJohn T. Bennett, October 1971manufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Text Book, A Guide to Mechanism in Organic Chemistry, by Peter Sykes, Second Edition
... Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE Manufacturing ...Textbook, Lab Reference - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDERed soft cover book with Chemical Molecular Structure Diagram on coverBarry Bassettmanufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Text Book, Chemistry: Principles and Properties, Sienko and Plane
... Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE Manufacturing ...Textbook, Lab Reference - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDERed soft cover book with Chemical Apparatus Diagram in Black on coverJohn T. Bennett, Lyddon Hall, Leeds 2manufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Reference Book, An Introduction to Organic Chemistry, by J.W. Baker
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Laboratory Reference Book - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDELight Brown hard cover book with Burgandy writing on coverJ.E. Redmanmanufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Reference Book, Introduction to Textile Chemistry, by H. Harper
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Laboratory Reference Book - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDERed hard cover book with Black writing on covermanufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Reference Book, Theoretical Organic Chemistry, Cohen
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Laboratory Reference Book - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDERed hard cover book with Black writing on coverJ M Bennettmanufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Reference Book, Practical Textile Chemistry, by J.W. Bell
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Laboratory Reference Book - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDELight Mauve hard cover book with Blue cloth tape repairs to spineG.S. Bennettmanufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Reference Book, A Textbook of Qualitative Chemical Analysis by Arthur I. Vogel
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Laboratory Reference Book - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDEDark Green hard cover book with Blue cloth tape repairs to spinemanufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Reference Book, Modern College Physics, Richards Sears Wehr Zemansky
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Laboratory Reference Book - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDERed hard cover book with Green Cream and Black DustcoverJohn T. Bennett Lyddon Hall, Leeds 2manufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Reference Book, A Textbook of Physics for the use of students of science and engineering, J. Duncan & S.G. Starling
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Laboratory Reference Book - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDEDark Blue hard cover book with Gold writing on spineJohn T. Bennett manufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Instrument - Realia, Textile Fabric Pilling Testing Machine, c1950
... Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE manufacture Peg Load ...Used at Norwellan for testing cloth North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDEWood and iron Instrument with handle that drags metal pin repeatedly over a cloth sample.Peg Load Checked at 2 lbs 20.11.69manufacture -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Framed Photographic Print, John Bennet Director North Western Woolen Mills, 1926
... Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE ...Boardroom Photograph Donated from Bennett Family North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE Large framed portrait of man in tweed jacket, shirt and tie with glassesJohn Bennett First Managing Director North Western Woollen Mills Pty Ltd 1926 manufacture -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Photograph - Framed Photographic Print, North Western woolen Mills, Graeme S Bennett, 1980
Boardroom Photograph Donated from Bennett Family North Western Woolen Mills. Later Norwellan then Aunde Large framed portrait of man in suitGraeme Bennett Managing Director North Textiles 1980 - 1996 manufacture -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Book - Laboratory Reference Book, Textile Scouring and Bleaching
... Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDE Manufacturing ...Textbook. Lab Reference - Norwellan & AUNDE North Western Woolen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDEBlack hardcover with grey dust JacketJohn T Bennett Lydon Hall Leeds 27.10.1970manufacturing -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Clothing - Woollen Dressing Gown c1950's
... grampians North Western Woollen Mills became Norwellan Textiles ...North Western Woollen Mills became Norwellan Textiles then AUNDEMans Tartan Woollen dressing gown. Fabric designed and woven at Stawell Woollen Mills Colour Blue Violet. Brand New - Norwellan Norwellan label on insidemanufacture -
National Wool Museum
Photograph, Carding Machine, Unknown
... established in 1899. textile machinery wool manufacture wool spinning ...Photograph most likely used for promotional purposes. The machine possibly could have been manufactured by Chadwick Machine Co Ltd, a British textile machine company established in 1899.Black and white photograph of a carding machine.Rear handwritten top edge - Chadwickstextile machinery, wool manufacture, wool, spinning -
National Wool Museum
Photograph, Carding Machine, Unknown
... in Rochdale. textile machinery wool manufacture wool Timlinsons Rag ...Photographs were most likely used for promotional purposes. The photographed machine was made by Tomlinsons (Roshdale) Limited, was British machine manufacture company based in Rochdale.Black and white photo of a Rag Puller Machine in landscape format. Location of photo looks to be in a textile mill.On machine - Tomlinsons (Roshdale) Limited.textile machinery, wool manufacture, wool, timlinsons, rag pulling -
National Wool Museum
Photograph, Loom, Unknown
... for promotional purposes. textile machinery wool manufacture wool Loom ...Photographs were most likely used for promotional purposes.Sepia photograph of a loom in landscape format.Bottom mid edge - NEG. 17689 ORDER M&C 12106textile machinery, wool manufacture, wool, loom -
National Wool Museum
Photograph, Loom, Unknown
... manufacturer based in Laisterdyke, Bradford. textile machinery wool ...Photographs were most likely used for promotional purposes. Loom made by David Crabtree & Son, a loom manufacturer based in Laisterdyke, Bradford.Black and white blue tinged photograph of a loom in landscape format.Stamped top right corner - David Crabtree & Son HOPE IRON WORKS, Laisterdyke, BRADFORDtextile machinery, wool manufacture, wool, loom -
National Wool Museum
Photograph, Spinning Machine, Unknown
... for promotional purposes. textile machinery wool manufacture wool spinning ...Photographs were most likely used for promotional purposes. Black and white photograph of a spinning machine in landscape format.textile machinery, wool manufacture, wool, spinning -
National Wool Museum
Administrative record - Business Card, George Hodgson Limited Business Card, Unknown
... of their looms. textile machinery wool manufacture wool Loom George ...George Hodgson Limited Business Card, a British loom manufacture based in Bradford England. The card showcases the awards the company as won as well as a description of one of their looms.Cream business card printed with the black ink. The front of the card lists the awards and medals the company had one in the background with an image of each award. The company logo is placed in the center. The back of the card has a drawing of a loom with a decorative border.Front top edge - Awards for Improvements & Excellence in Power Looms for Weaving. Front middle - George Hodgson Limited Makers of Power Looms for Weaving. Bradford, Yorkshire, England Front bottom edge - Presented by J T Elioors (?) Back bottom edge - One shaft heavy underpick worsted and woollen cloth loom, with 4 holed drop box on each side, fitted with positive wheel dobby.textile machinery, wool manufacture, wool, loom, george hodgson limited -
National Wool Museum
Photograph, Scouring Machines, Unknown
... in an unknown textile mill. textile machinery wool manufacture wool ...Photographs were most likely used for promotional purposes. Room filled with wool scouring machines in an unknown textile mill.Sepia photo of a room filled with Scouring Machines in landscape format, located a textile mill.textile machinery, wool manufacture, wool, scouring -
National Wool Museum
Photograph, Unknown
... processing factory. textile machinery wool manufacture wool Black ...Man standing in what looks to be a wool processing factory.Black and white photo of a man surrounded by machinery in a landscape format. The photo is attached to a olive coloured board.textile machinery, wool manufacture, wool -
National Wool Museum
Textile - Rug, Returned Soldiers and Sailors Mill, 1963
... textile manufacture... original box for nearly 60 years. rs&s mills textile manufacture ...The Returned Soldiers and Sailors Mills was located near the Barwon river on Pakington Street, Geelong, where its building still stands. The mill was established in October 1922 with capital acquired from War Gratuity Bonds. The mill produced fine grade woollen products with its speciality being ‘Retsol’ travelling rugs. The mill first began to run into financial troubles with the ‘Credit Squeeze’ or the ‘Holt Jolt’ of the early 1960s. This saw import restrictions lifted which triggered the start of a minor recession and a rise in unemployment. Included in these troubles was the RS&S Mill which saw the number of employees gradually decrease and business declining with cheaper imports beginning to grab an expanding part of the market share. The mill was eventually purchased by Godfrey Hirst in 1973 who tried to continue operations without success and in June 1975 textile production at the site ceased. Outside of financial considerations contributing to the closure of Woollen Mills in this period was the declining need for heavier fabrics as in-home heating and insulation improved. This need had been replaced for a demand for ever softer, finer and lighter worsted fabrics for more casual clothing. Modern day textile production requires fewer steps in the processing of materials for this use. This meant large factory complexes such as early woollen mills like the RS&S mills were no longer required. Compared to modern textile production which can spin a fine yarn out of synthetic fibre or imported cotton easily, spinning fine yarn from medium quality wool at a textile factory was cumbersome and no longer financially viable to suit new consumer demands. This rug provides context to this statement. It was gifted to Shirley and Gordon Green as a wedding present in November 1963 by one of Gordon's colleagues in the wool industry. Living in areas such as Neutral Bay, the Hornsby area and later in life retiring to the Central Coast, the blanket was too heavy for use in these weather conditions and hence it stayed in its original box for nearly 60 years. Top and bottom of rug has frilled edges. Pattern is titled the 'Clan Cameron' and is repeated in a 7x7 grid. Front of rug has a red background with 4 vertical and horizontal lines. All is surrounded by a yellow boarder. Label is stitched into the bottom right corner. Reverse of rug also has a repeating 7x7 grid. Blue background with thick green horizontal stripe. Yellow and red boarder to the grid with 4 red vertical and horizontal lines making up the interior. Rug measure 1550 x 2040mm, approximately the same size as a queen size mattress.Wording, Bottom right corner. THE GEELONG R.S&S. WOOLEN MILLS/ PURE/ WOOL/ AUSTRALIA/ The John Monash Rug (cursive)/ The Clan Cameron (cursive)rs&s mills, textile manufacture, rug, clan cameron, sydney greasy wool exchange -
National Wool Museum
Carpet Samples, Godfrey Hirst and CO. Pty Ltd, c.1990
... Textile Manufacture... and design. Godfrey Hirst Carpet Textile Manufacture Wording on rear ...Carpet samples created by Godfrey Hirst, a carpet mill whose history spans back to 1865 when the Victorian Woollen and Cloth Manufacturing Company began operations in Geelong and was purchased in the 1890s by the man Godfrey Hirst. Godfrey Hirst’s entrepreneurial skills and knowledge of the industry led to the great success which saw the company expand in multiple forms over the next century and a half. Today, thousands of metres of carpet are produced by Godfrey Hirst every day, and their flooring can be found in millions of homes. These 6 carpet samples date from the early 1990s and each have a unique colour pattern and design.Each carpet sample is made with a pile fibre that is 100% wool. The primary backing of the carpet is a woven polypropylene with a secondary backing a woven jute. Carpet 8102.1's colour name is Slate. It has a dark grey background with a red and blue diagonal stripe. The pattern repeats in a 10cm x 11.5cm block. Carpet 8102.2’s colour name is Terracotta. It is a mostly block pink colour with no repeating pattern. It has occasional flicks of grey. Carpet 8102.3’s colour name is Arctic Night. It has white, light blue and grey colours repeating one after another in a diagonal line. Carpet 8102.4’s colour name is Ivory. It has a brown background with a cream colour diamond. The pattern repeats in a 15cm x 15cm block. Carpet 8102.5’s colour name is Glenwood. It has a thin darker green and lighter green horizontal stripe spanning its entire width. These stripes repeat the height of the carpet. Carpet 8105.6’s colour name is also Ivory. It has a brown background with a cream colour leaf pattern. The pattern repeats in a 92cm x 92cm block.Wording on rear: Numerous. See Media.godfrey hirst, carpet, textile manufacture -
National Wool Museum
Book - Fabric Sample Book, c.1920
... textile manufacture... a century old. textile design textile manufacture The cover ...A Textile Designer’s Fabric Sample Book is an important tool for keeping a record of past designs. This is useful in order to showcase a designer’s previous work; functioning like a portfolio or a résumé. They also serve as a source of inspiration, sometimes even providing a template to re-release iconic designs. The National Wool Museum has a large collection of Fabric Sample Books. They reveal the colour and daring designs produced by textile mills across various time periods. This Fabric Sample Book is from the 1920s and gives us insights into design trends that are now over a century old.The cover of this book has a brown/grey marble. It carries many marks and oils from the hands, after more than a century of use. A strip of red tape has been added to the spine of the book in order to give it integrity. The book internally has white pages that have turned a brown/cream with age. These pages have a faint blue line printed horizontally across them, to assist with handwriting. The contents of the pages are fabric samples which have been staple to them, as well as handwriting with a blue ink. The pages also include technical drawings, relating to the fabric samples and how such samples were woven together.textile design, textile manufacture -
National Wool Museum
Textile - Travel Rug, Albany Woollen Mills, c1960s
Collector says - "I can still recall one of my earliest childhood memories, of my nana's bright aqua shoes against the checks of our family travel rug on summer picnics. Maybe that's when this collection planted its seed in me - 40 years later I start my first blanket collection after stumbling across old Onkaparinga travel rugs. I would go to a vintage market in Collingwood every month and almost always found a good one, amassing enough for the entire household. Everyone had their favourite, even the cat had his own – a small red tartan one just for him." Note from collector-"For more than 100 years blankets were made all over Australia in over 100 woollen mills. My aim, is to preserve 100 examples of these wonderful pieces of history. Ten years ago I started collecting the iconic Onkaparinga travel rugs, so that on movie nights at home there would be plenty to go around. Everyone had their favourite; even the cat had his own – a small red tartan one. Keeping an eye out for those travel rugs at op-shops and markets, collectable stores and bazaars, led to noticing vintage blankets. I'd never really thought about them before or paid much attention though of course I had grown up with them at my grandmother's. When I discovered my first Laconia cream blanket with blue stripes, my eyes just went gaga. Well that was it, I was hooked and since then over 500 blankets have passed through my hands. These common, everyday items, found in all households for so many decades, were traditional engagement gifts. Pairs were prized wedding presents turning into family heirlooms. They were fashionable dressers of beds, givers of warmth, bestowers of security and reliability. The comfort found in these objects resonates with almost all of us; we grew up with them ourselves or fondly recall them in a grandparent’s home. There is no modern replacement with the integrity of these old blankets, many of them now older than most of us. They are romantic, sensible, special, familiar, nostalgic and nothing else feels so appropriate in so many situations. No offense to the great Aussie doona, but from hippie to hipster, at a music festival, picnic, campsite or couch, a vintage blanket is something coveted by all. This industry that employed tens of thousands and must have been such a huge contributor to the economy is almost completely lost now. Blanket Fever is an ode to everything that came before: the land, the sheep, the shearers, the hands, the mills, the weavers, the designers, the distributors, the department stores. To the grandparents that gave them, the people that received them, the families that kept them; thank you. I’m passionate about my collection of Australian blankets manufactured in mostly Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania from the 1930s to the end of the 1960s. The collection has blankets from each of these four decades representing the styles and fashions of their time and includes dated advertisements which help determine the eras the blankets are from. " Tan and brown plaid fringed travel rug. Albany Woollen Mill/Travel Rug/All Pure Wool/Emblem: A, Albany blanket, blanket fever, wool, rug, albany, albany woollen mills -
National Wool Museum
Textile - Blanket, Albany Woollen Mills, Albany Woollen Mills blanket, c 1950s
Note from collector: I love the generous size and thickness of Albany blankets and know someone who collects from this Mill only. The colour shades and combinations Albany used are still so gorgeous. From Western Australia. Note from collector - "For more than 100 years blankets were made all over Australia in over 100 woollen mills. My aim, is to preserve 100 examples of these wonderful pieces of history. Ten years ago I started collecting the iconic Onkaparinga travel rugs, so that on movie nights at home there would be plenty to go around. Everyone had their favourite; even the cat had his own – a small red tartan one. Keeping an eye out for those travel rugs at op-shops and markets, collectable stores and bazaars, led to noticing vintage blankets. I'd never really thought about them before or paid much attention though of course I had grown up with them at my grandmother's. When I discovered my first Laconia cream blanket with blue stripes, my eyes just went gaga. Well that was it, I was hooked and since then over 500 blankets have passed through my hands. These common, everyday items, found in all households for so many decades, were traditional engagement gifts. Pairs were prized wedding presents turning into family heirlooms. They were fashionable dressers of beds, givers of warmth, bestowers of security and reliability. The comfort found in these objects resonates with almost all of us; we grew up with them ourselves or fondly recall them in a grandparent’s home. There is no modern replacement with the integrity of these old blankets, many of them now older than most of us. They are romantic, sensible, special, familiar, nostalgic and nothing else feels so appropriate in so many situations. No offense to the great Aussie doona, but from hippie to hipster, at a music festival, picnic, campsite or couch, a vintage blanket is something coveted by all. This industry that employed tens of thousands and must have been such a huge contributor to the economy is almost completely lost now. Blanket Fever is an ode to everything that came before: the land, the sheep, the shearers, the hands, the mills, the weavers, the designers, the distributors, the department stores. To the grandparents that gave them, the people that received them, the families that kept them; thank you. I’m passionate about my collection of Australian blankets manufactured in mostly Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania from the 1930s to the end of the 1960s. The collection has blankets from each of these four decades representing the styles and fashions of their time and includes dated advertisements which help determine the eras the blankets are from. " Checked blanket, pink, lemon and violetAlbany Woollen Mill/Blanket/All Pure Wool/Emblem: A, Albany blanket, blanket fever, wool, albany, albany woollen mills -
National Wool Museum
Textile - Blanket, Albany Woollen Mills, c1950s
Collector says "I love the generous size and thickness of Albany blankets and know someone who collects from this Mill only. The colour shades and combinations Albany used are still so gorgeous. From Western Australia. Note from Collector - "For more than 100 years blankets were made all over Australia in over 100 woollen mills. My aim, is to preserve 100 examples of these wonderful pieces of history. Ten years ago I started collecting the iconic Onkaparinga travel rugs, so that on movie nights at home there would be plenty to go around. Everyone had their favourite; even the cat had his own – a small red tartan one. Keeping an eye out for those travel rugs at op-shops and markets, collectable stores and bazaars, led to noticing vintage blankets. I'd never really thought about them before or paid much attention though of course I had grown up with them at my grandmother's. When I discovered my first Laconia cream blanket with blue stripes, my eyes just went gaga. Well that was it, I was hooked and since then over 500 blankets have passed through my hands. These common, everyday items, found in all households for so many decades, were traditional engagement gifts. Pairs were prized wedding presents turning into family heirlooms. They were fashionable dressers of beds, givers of warmth, bestowers of security and reliability. The comfort found in these objects resonates with almost all of us; we grew up with them ourselves or fondly recall them in a grandparent’s home. There is no modern replacement with the integrity of these old blankets, many of them now older than most of us. They are romantic, sensible, special, familiar, nostalgic and nothing else feels so appropriate in so many situations. No offense to the great Aussie doona, but from hippie to hipster, at a music festival, picnic, campsite or couch, a vintage blanket is something coveted by all. This industry that employed tens of thousands and must have been such a huge contributor to the economy is almost completely lost now. Blanket Fever is an ode to everything that came before: the land, the sheep, the shearers, the hands, the mills, the weavers, the designers, the distributors, the department stores. To the grandparents that gave them, the people that received them, the families that kept them; thank you. I’m passionate about my collection of Australian blankets manufactured in mostly Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania from the 1930s to the end of the 1960s. The collection has blankets from each of these four decades representing the styles and fashions of their time and includes dated advertisements which help determine the eras the blankets are from. Please refer to the following worksheet for a full breakdown of the collection." Checked blanket, pink, blue and creamAlbany Woollen Mill/Blanket/All Pure Wool/Emblem: A, Albany blanket, blanket fever, wool, albany, albany woollen mills -
National Wool Museum
Textile - Blanket, Castlemaine Woollen Mill, c1950s
Collector says - "Once I had gathered a dozen or so blankets, I started noticing the many different labels; where they were made, by who, the logos and fonts used. Then the labels became a thing, then the blankets had to have a label to join the collection. My favourite labels are by Physician, they had at least 4 different labels over the decades but the best has to be the Lady In Bed logo. Physician, Onkaparinga, Eagley and others matched the colour of the label to the colour of the blanket - a nice touch. Strangely, Castlemaine labels were always sewn on the back of the blanket where all the other mills sewed theirs on the front. To this day I always roll or fold a blanket with its label on display." Note from Collector - "For more than 100 years blankets were made all over Australia in over 100 woollen mills. My aim, is to preserve 100 examples of these wonderful pieces of history. Ten years ago I started collecting the iconic Onkaparinga travel rugs, so that on movie nights at home there would be plenty to go around. Everyone had their favourite; even the cat had his own – a small red tartan one. Keeping an eye out for those travel rugs at op-shops and markets, collectable stores and bazaars, led to noticing vintage blankets. I'd never really thought about them before or paid much attention though of course I had grown up with them at my grandmother's. When I discovered my first Laconia cream blanket with blue stripes, my eyes just went gaga. Well that was it, I was hooked and since then over 500 blankets have passed through my hands. These common, everyday items, found in all households for so many decades, were traditional engagement gifts. Pairs were prized wedding presents turning into family heirlooms. They were fashionable dressers of beds, givers of warmth, bestowers of security and reliability. The comfort found in these objects resonates with almost all of us; we grew up with them ourselves or fondly recall them in a grandparent’s home. There is no modern replacement with the integrity of these old blankets, many of them now older than most of us. They are romantic, sensible, special, familiar, nostalgic and nothing else feels so appropriate in so many situations. No offense to the great Aussie doona, but from hippie to hipster, at a music festival, picnic, campsite or couch, a vintage blanket is something coveted by all. This industry that employed tens of thousands and must have been such a huge contributor to the economy is almost completely lost now. Blanket Fever is an ode to everything that came before: the land, the sheep, the shearers, the hands, the mills, the weavers, the designers, the distributors, the department stores. To the grandparents that gave them, the people that received them, the families that kept them; thank you. I’m passionate about my collection of Australian blankets manufactured in mostly Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania from the 1930s to the end of the 1960s. The collection has blankets from each of these four decades representing the styles and fashions of their time and includes dated advertisements which help determine the eras the blankets are from." Checked blanket, pink, blue and creamCastlemaine/100 pure virgin wool blanket, blanket fever, wool, castlemaine, castlemaine woollen mill