Tonight is the unveiling of my work I created for Bliss Home and the International Biscuit Festival.
Also, today is the day before the first Market Square Farmers' Market, so it's practically Christmas around here. After a 12 hour day, I will collapse into a heap of exhaustion and rise in the morning like the Phoenix (or a biscuit) and go to the farmers' market to drink upppity coffee and buy greens.
Self Rising: A
Celebration of Flour
In
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, cotton sacks
replaced barrels as containers for dry goods such as flour, sugar,
rice, chicken feed, and seed. These bags were usually white with the
company’s logo printed directly onto the cotton. Thrifty wives and
mothers would repurpose these sacks into fabric for sewing --
making pillow cases, quilts, hand towels, and even clothing. Imagine
the embarrassment of your dress or underwear having the Pillsbury or
White Lily logo on it. A great effort was made to remove the printed
logo – sometimes with lye soap, bleach, or even kerosene, but
sometimes they remained. Companies producing these dry goods realized
that their bags were going on to have a second life. In an effort to
ease some of the hardships of the Great Depression and to entice more
customers, they began printing sacks with colorful patterns and paper
labels that could be easily removed.* It was their hope that the
home consumer would buy their brand of flour or feed not because they
were faithful customers, but because the print on the bag was
desirable for a new dress or quilt. This body of work is a
celebration of some of the more interesting flour logos of the past
and the wonderful tradition of printed, patterned flour sacks.
*One
of these companies was the Bemis Brothers Bag Company founded in St.
Louis, Missouri in 1858. It was one of the first companies to produce
machine-sewn bags for dry goods. By the 1920s, The Bemis Brothers Bag
Co. had opened 5 more plants across the United States. In the 1930s,
the Bemis Company began to produce printed dress sacks, and would
continue to do so up until the 1960s. Their cat logo was designed in
1881, and the cat was named Biddy after the best mouse hunter in the
Bemis factory. According to company history, owner Judson Moss Bemis
wanted to emphasize that in “letting the cat out of the bag” he
had nothing to hide and dealt fairly with his customers. This small
logo can be seen on many older flour bags.
All these and more will be on display and for sale at Bliss Home for the month of May.