Showing 593 items
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Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Artwork, other - Tapestry, The Portland Fibre Group & Valerie Kirk et al, From the Land to the Sea, 1996-2004
Woven by The Portland Fibre Group, proposed for installation in the foyer of the Glenelg Shire Council Offices, opposite the entry to the Council Chambers.Tapestry woven in wool on twine warp. Cream coloured background with pale blue flecks of colour, central motif of coat of arms features two birds standing on grey platforms, either side of shield. Central to the shield is a masted sailing vessel sitting atop blue and white horizontal lines representing the ocean. Around the sails of the vessel are radiating yellow rays and a blue surrounds representing sunburst against blue sky. The top third of the shield shows a pair of sheep heads against a red background. Above the shield is depicted a helmet, crowned with a whale. Blue plumage is shown coming from the helmet and framing the whale. -
National Wool Museum
Book, Woolclassing -the wool fibre, book 2
"Woolclassing -the wool fibre, book 2" - Open College of Further Education, South Aust Dept of Further Education, 1979woolclassing agriculture - education, woolclassing, agriculture - education -
National Wool Museum
Report, The Minspec Report : summary and recommendations
"The Minspec Report : summary and recommendations"- Australian Wool Corporation, Marketing Division, Fibre Specification Department, 25 March 1977.woolclassing - objective measurement wool - measurement wool sales export - wool wool marketing, australian wool corporation, woolclassing - objective measurement, wool - measurement, wool sales, export - wool, wool marketing -
Moorabbin Air Museum
Book - A selection of fine paintings depicting the history of The Australian Flying Corps and the Royal Australian Air Force CANVAS TO CARBON FIBRE, Australian Government Publishing Service, CANVAS TO CARBON FIBRE, 1995
A selection of fine paintings depicting the history of The Australian Flying Corps and the Royal Australian Air Force CANVAS TO CARBON FIBREJacket cover showing close up inflight painting of two WW1 or pre WW1 era bi-planes against a twilight or dawn skynon-fictionA selection of fine paintings depicting the history of The Australian Flying Corps and the Royal Australian Air Force CANVAS TO CARBON FIBRE -
National Wool Museum
Book, Minspec part 2: cost-benefit analysis and broad implementation programme
"Minspec part 2: cost-benefit analysis and broad implementation programme"- Australian Wool Corporatioon, Fibre specification department, 1978.wool - measurement woolclassing - objective measurement wool sales wool brokering, australian wool corporation, wool - measurement, woolclassing - objective measurement, wool sales, wool brokering -
National Wool Museum
Book, Minspec Part 2: cost benefit analysis and broad implementation programme
"Minspec Part 2: cost benefit analysis and broad implementation programme" - Fibre Specification Dept, Australian Wool Corporation, 1978.wool - measurement woolclassing - objective measurement wool sales wool marketing trade - international, australian wool corporation, wool - measurement, woolclassing - objective measurement, wool sales, wool marketing, trade - international -
Bendigo Military Museum
Accessory - IDENTITY DISCS, C.1942 - 45
Roy Thurlow collection, refer Cat No 4688P.1) Identity disc metal, eight sided, stamped both sides, has brown cord through. .2) Identity disc’s, pair, fibre brown colour, one round, one eight sided, stamped both sides, held together by a metal chain..1) On front, “THURLOW R.L, A2, VX77313”, on rear, “CE”. .2) On front both, “VX77313, CE, R.L.THURLOW”, on rear, “A2”identity dis’s, accessory -
Tennis Australia
Racquet, Circa 1967
A Bancroft Winner, wooden squash racquet, with adhesive tape whipping around shoulders and shaft, and a leather handle grip with linked quatrefoil perforations. Materials: Wood, Lacquer, Ink, Adhesive tape, Metal, Adhesive tape, Fibre, Glue, Leather, Cloth, Gut, Stringtennis -
Tennis Australia
Racquet, Circa 1975
An unstrung Bancroft Super Winner, wooden squash racquet, with ribbon whipping around shoulders and shaft, and a leather handle grip with triangular-patterned perforations. Materials: Wood, Lacquer, Ink, Adhesive tape, Metal, Enamel, Fibre, Ribbon, Glue, Leather, Cloth, Bambootennis -
Tennis Australia
Action game, Circa 1897
'Piladex or Hand Ball' game set with coloured lithograph on cover. Contains two balloons, and a thin rope divider weighted with wooden cubes. Also contains an instructions/rules pamphlet. Set appears complete. Materials: Cardboard, Ink, Rubber, Natural fibre, Woodtennis -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Artwork, other - Tapestry, Tapestry - Town of Portland Coat of Arms, 1996-2004
Made by Portland Fibre Group, 1996-2004: specifically Mary Sharrock, Dot Kelly, Ollie Dellar, Doris Amor and Ede Bailey.Tapestry woven in wool on twine warp. Cream coloured background with pale blue flecks of colour, central motif of coat of arms - features two birds standing on grey platforms to either side of shield. Central to the shield is a masted sailing vessel sitting atop blue and white horizontal lines representing the ocean. Around the sails of the vessel are radiating yellow rays and a blue surrounds representing sunburst against blue sky. The top third of shield shows a pair of sheep heads against a red background. Above the shield is depicted a helmet, crowned with a whale. Blue plumage is shown coming from the helmet and framing the whale.Front: (Weavers' initials, except Ede Bailey, woven into tapestry and are seen on the hem). Back: (no inscriptions)town of portland, textile, tapestry, weaving -
National Wool Museum
Book, Wool: the fashion fibre
"Wool: the fashion fibre" - Australian Wool Corporation, c.1985. Examines the use of wool for womens garments and includes descriptions of processes and styles.fashion textile production, australian wool corporation, fashion, textile production -
National Wool Museum
Book, Wool: eminently suitable
"Wool: the fashion fibre" - Australian Wool Corporation, c.1985. Examines the use of wool for mens garments and includes descriptions of processes and styles.fashion textile production, australian wool corporation, fashion, textile production -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Artwork, other - Tongan - Tapa Cloth, n.d
Circular tapa cloth on masonite backing board, with edges sewn with plant fibre. Scene painted on cloth depicts huts with palm trees by the side of a creek. The creek is edged by a sandy verge and reeds. In the creek are fish traps. The image is painted in black and dark ochre dyes. -
Tennis Australia
Racquet, Circa 1985
A graphiet-composite squash racquet, not for sale, and most likely a prototype. Small sticker over plastic handle grip seal features weight and head/throat length information. Possibly a Dunlop product. Materials: Graphite, Ceramic, Fibre, Nylon, Leather, Adhesive tape, Plastictennis -
Tennis Australia
Racquet, Circa 1981
An Adidas Ilie Nastase tennis racquet, with tape whipping around shoulders, and leather handle grip with patterned perforations. Autograph by Nastase features along shaft and neck, on obverse. Materials: Wood, Nylon, Ink, Glue, Lacquer, Metal, Leather, Plastic, Fibre, Adhesive tapetennis -
Tennis Australia
Racquet, Circa 1965
An A.R.Co. Crown tennis racquet, with fibreglass and hide shoulder reinforcements, bamboo laminated shaft, and leather handle grip with X-formation perforations. Materials: Wood, Nylon, Ink, Glue, Lacquer, Metal, Leather, Plastic, Adhesive tape, String, Fibre, Fibreglass, Bamboo, Hidetennis -
Tennis Australia
Racquet, Circa 1965
A collection of 36 identical Tennis Craft 'Speedflex Deluxe Model' tennis racquets, with no netting, and tan & brown Kinghorn 'Original' tacky perforated handle grips. Materials: Wood, Fibre, Paint, Ribbon, Adhesive tape, Leather, Cloth, Paper, Ink, Glue, Lacquer, Metaltennis -
Tennis Australia
Racquet, Circa 1965
A collection of 4 identical Tennis Craft 'Speedflex Deluxe Model' tennis racquets, with no netting, and tan & black Kinghorn 'Original' tacky perforated handle grips. Materials: Wood, Fibre, Paint, Ribbon, Adhesive tape, Leather, Cloth, Paper, Ink, Glue, Lacquer, Metaltennis -
Tennis Australia
Action game, Circa 1916
'Paddle Tennis' set in red box with a lid label featuring image of game played on street before a crowd. Contains two solid wood paddles a string net and two rubber balls. Materials: Cardboard, Ink, Wood, Metal, Natural fibre, Felt, Bonetennis -
Emerald Museum & Nobelius Heritage Park
Horse Collar
A horse collar is a part of a horse harness that is used to distribute the load around a horse's neck and shoulders when pulling a wagon or plough. The collar often supports and pads a pair of curved metal or wood pieces, called hames, to which the traces of the harness are attached.The horse collar is oval, rather than circular and it is not very flexible. It is padded with a straw- like fibre and the shape conforms to the shape of the horse's body. A strap and buckle is attached to adjust to the horses' neck and shoulders. The other buckle on the opposite side of the collar has no complementary strap to attach to it. -
National Wool Museum
Book, Proceedings of the International Wool Textile Research Conference Australia 1955 vol. D
"Proceedings of the International Wool Textile Research Conference Australia 1955; vol. D physics of wool and other viseo-elastic fibres", produced by CSIRO.csiro -
Tennis Australia
Action game, Circa 1937
Ernest Sewell series 'Tiddlytennis' game. Patent no.22857/35 (1935-6). Contains miniature net and wooden net supports, printed cotton as 'court', and eight bone discs (1 large, 5 small). Materials: Cardboard, Ink, Glue, Wood, Natural fibre, Papertennis -
Creswick Campus Historical Collection - University of Melbourne
Photograph - Photograph of a log being removed from treatment tanks, A log being removed from treatment tanks, unknown
21.5x15cm Is Captioned : "No. 2 . A log being removed from treatment tanks. Logs are boiled for many hours to soften the fibres and thus facilitate smoother cutting."Photograph (Mounted) -
Charlton Golden Grains Museum Inc
Photograph, High Street Charlton 1988
High Street corner 1988. New footpaths being laid. Medical Centre and shops, Charlton Cinema, Patersons Fibre Glass factory, ? Harris MenslandColour photograph of corner of Davies St and High St. New footpath being laid with warning sign and flags. Three cars in Medical Centre carpark; white ute and one yellow and one grey/silver car. high st charlton, medical centre, patersons fibre glass, harris mensland -
South Gippsland Shire Council
Artwork, other - Quilt and accompanying book, South Gippsland Community Quilt, 2004
Local women made this quilt and book in 2004 over a period of four months. Meg Viney fibre artist and then director of Meeniyan Art Gallery initiated the project. Handmade and machine embroidered quilt with 16pp handmade book. The quilt celebrates the lives of local women in our rural environment. The quilt features cyanotype printed images of the women surrounded by blue floral-patterned fabric and gold/brown patterned trim. The book features handmade paper pages with images and stories on each of the women who were involved in the making of the quilt. -
National Wool Museum
Picker
Wool picking machine designed to separate locks of wool before it is carded and spun. The picker opens the wool’s locks which makes it easier to send the fleece through a carding machine. It does this by teasing the fibres (which can also be done by hand just by pulling the lock structure apart), but a picker does this in bulk and much quicker than what can be done by hand. It is possible to spin fibres directly after the picking stage; however, it is usually more desirable to card and blend them with other fibres. Typically, at a textile mill, a picking machine can separate enough lengths of fibre for a full day’s work after just a single hour. It will also help to remove any vegetation matter or other any unwanted elements that may be present in the wool. The quality of the casting on this machine suggest that it was made locally, either in Australia or New Zealand. Mike Leggett, the donor of the machine, acquired it from New Zealand where the seller said it had been used by his father to pick wool to make hand stuffed horse saddles. Mike attempted to used it a couple of times to pick alpaca hair, but the speed of the attached motor caused damage to the fibres. The motor is thought to be an added attachment, sometime around the 1960s judging by its age, while the machine itself is thought to be dated around the 1920s. The machine works by inserting wool through the rollers. Initially there was a conveyor belt feeder system which was powered by the handle on the side. This conveyor belt has been removed however, most likely due to age and deterioration. Wool is now fed through the initial teeth and is met by a spiked rotating drum which works to separate the fibres. The separated fibres would then complete a loop of the drum before being dispatched somewhere below, around where the motor presently sits, at a rapid rate of speed. Typically this wool will be collected in a closet or large catchment area, as can be seen from the 8:47 minute marker in the linked video (link - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kMjx-t3tH3A). It is not apparent how the wool is collected with this machine. Red and green machine with four green legs currently attached to a wooden pallet with wheels for easy movement. The green legs lead up to a red central circular barrel from which many attachments are present. Also present on the wooden pallet is a small black motor which is attached by a rubber belt to the central drum inside the red barrel. The belt spins the wooden drum via a dark red circular plate attached to the side of the drum. On the other side of the red barrel, a green handle extends for turning the picker’s conveyor belt feeder system. Two green walls extend forward from the central red barrel, guarding either side of where the conveyor belt would have been. At the start of these walls is a wooden cylinder, which the conveyor belt would have wrapped around, followed by two interlocking gears which rotate and accept the fed wool. The red roof extends over the central cylinder from here, securing the wool inside and protecting hands from the heavily spiked internal wooden cylinder which rotates and separates (picks) the wool. Extending over the top of this red roof is a green handle which reaches to the back of the machine (not pictured). Here it accepts a weight to ensure pressure is always present for the initial feeder interlocked gear teeth. There are two large gear cogs on the rubber belt side of the machine and 3 small gear cogs on the handle side of the machine, all coloured green. A green handle is also present at the rear of the machine, below the location from which the weight is hanging. A power cable extends from the motor and there are two adjustable metal rods on the top of the machine, the purpose of these rods is presently unknown. Black texter. On top of drum. Wording: HG3707 Wording. Imprint: BRACEWIND BLYN On motor. Wording AEIwool picking, textile manufacturing, wool processing -
Mission to Seafarers Victoria
Flag - Church pennant, Southern Cross flags, Mid - Late 20th C
The Flag was donated by the Paynesville Maritime Museum for use from time to time in the Chapel at the Mission to Seafarers Victoria.This type of signal flag was hoisted by ships afloat to indicate that a church service was in progress. Loose weave blend of synthetic and natural fibre large triangular pennant with red cross near hoist hem and long parallel panels of blue and red down the length of the pennant on white ground; rope hoist tethered and steel hoist fixings all calico bound along hem.Inscribed in black texta top corner 5966 and in lwr crnr CHURCHpennants, flags, signal flag, church pennant, paynesville maritime museum -
Tennis Australia
Racquet, Circa 1972
A fibre reinforced Slazenger 'Manuel Orantes Signature' wooden racquet, with Slazenger black panther emblem across the throat on both sides, and Slazenger-brand leather handle grip. Materials: Wood, Nylon, Metal, Glue, Lacquer, Leather, Ink, Ribbon, Adhesive tape, Paint, Plastic, Stringtennis -
Montmorency/Eltham RSL Sub Branch
Uniform - Helmet, Steel, British, MkIV, 1945
British Steel Helmet modified from the similarly shaped Mk III and introduced in 1945. It was Britain's last metal helmet and was replaced by the fibre Mk VI helmet in 1985. British MkIV Steel Helmet with Lift-the-Dot liner attachment. Painted khaki Green with stainless steel rim. Turtle sheel shape and elasticated web chinstrap. Most of liner is missing.Inside Stamped: RO&CO FT 4 1945 (1945 stamp below figure 4)