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The Nettle Dress

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Over the course of seven years Allan Brown makes a dress by hand from foraged nettles. In the process, as he experiences the loss of two loved ones, he weaves his love into the fabric that he is creating. He spends seven summers harvesting the nettle and seven winters spinning it into fabric to make a dress for his daughter. The thread he creates carries his grief and his love, so that the cloth represents all of the love he has put into it. The nettles are free, foragable and renewable. As Allan transforms the nettles he himself is transformed by the healing power of nature and slow crafting.
Be The Change
1
Learn more from Allan Brown on the process of making textiles from nettle. 
2
Read about the importance of nettle to the sustainable fashion industry.
3
Slow down and take time to create something with your hands - a handmade card, a complicated recipe, whatever nurtures you - and then share your creation with a loved one. 
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Reflections (16)

atreyee
Grounding and life-affirming. Everything that we own, use or consume is nature altered most of the times to the point of it being totally unrecognisable from the original source. Allan Brown's textile, fabric or cloth is hardly something which could make you forget the walk down the forest track, its smells or the touch of the nettles - the colours of the earth. Its porous - full of air, sunshine, smell of the earth & rains. I have a question for Allen, how do these fabrics age? Since they are living fabrics. Do you 'fix' them or allow them to naturally change colour?
Nancy
A holy man so truth inspired creating a fabric/sacred seven:seven/ making a dress for his daughter. Me unwanted born a girl/so abused, I imagine his dress on me. I dance/swirl in it: my divine feminine/true masculine in Unity - all blame forgiven deeper. So needed this today. Thank you Allan Brown-finding beauty in nettles. I love you so.
Promise
Extraordinary Grace and transformation flows in all aspects of this gorgeous sharing of heart and handsđź’—
Vadivu
I'm moved by how the cloth and him become One gift of love. For those of us who don't have Allan's skill of weaving, I have found Saori weaving to be accessible, therapeutic and meditative. It's a global movement of celebrating our humanity, creativity and imperfection.
verĂłnica
Allan mentioning he didn´t know if it was possible... don´t we all feel that way when loss and sadness comes our way... how will we go on? And yet we walk and breathe and try and nature guides us and holds our pain. Threading the sadness and loss into memory and life, tide and ebb, time and flow. A dress of nettles? A real dress of nettles? This is so touching, beautiful and inspiring. So whole. Thank you.
Kristin Pedemonti
The love and care and patience & the depth of noticing the love being woven into the fabric inspired me. Thank you♡
Jim
One-ness vivid,alive, with everything
Judith
The deep intentionality of being one with nature and channeling his grief over a long period of time into something of such joy and beauty. I am tearfully awestruck! Thank you!
Jennifer
Such heartfelt love and tenderness. The essence of love made the process and result a joy to feel and to watch.
Roseanna
So touching....heart opening. What dedication.
Iris
It's the personification of a folktale I've told many times and at the heart of a project I will embark on in Autumn. A tale of seven or twelve brothers turned into ravens an the love and devotion of a sister who sits in silence, harvesting and spinning nettles, weaving the cloth and sowing these magical garments Allan speaks of, this textile that heals and holds memory, grief and story - that once thrown over these raven brothers - returns them to their human form. Congratulations Allan - this is truely beautiful!
Cindy
Amazing in every way.
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