School of Design Textile Design

Lydia Budler (She/Her)

My project is an exploration and celebration of lesbian memorabilia, mostly from the Glasgow Women’s Library Lesbian Archives. Taking initial inspiration from the 1980s Rebel Dykes and imagery from the Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp, I became fascinated by symbolism and the idea of ‘wearing’ your sexuality. This message attached to textiles is very important to me.

Throughout this project I wanted my work to say something and tell a story. Banners have long been associated with protests and Trade Unions, pieces designed are intended to connect their traditional purpose of highlighting solidarity and unity alongside my own more contemporary messages.

Through reusing and repurposing textiles I have used patchwork in order to recycle remnants to create my final pieces. My use of intricate beadwork and hand embroidery is significant as this adds a personal handwriting to these, supporting the story I am telling.

I see my collection as textile art pieces with a purpose to challenge conformity.

Contact
lydiasarty@gmail.com
L.Budler1@student.gsa.ac.uk
@lydiasarty
Works
Cloning of a Nation
Lavender Menace
Lesbian Tide Magazine
Sappho Magazine
Dyke Crowned Homecoming Queen
Live! The Butchettes!
Lesberado
Final fabric samples
Collection of Lesbian Badges
Book of Lesbian Badges
Book of Beaded Samples

Cloning of a Nation

Cloning of a Nation is a banner created using imagery found from the Glasgow Women’s Library archives. The slogan was found in a Lesbian Tide magazine from 1974.

Lavender Menace

The base of this banner was created using heavily embroidered ribbons and digitally embroidered scrap fabrics. I used beadloom samples and badges to embellish the banner and add more personalised detail.

Lesbian Tide Magazine

An embroidered magazine responding to the lesbian archives at Glasgow Women’s Library. The Lesbian Tide  was the first lesbian magazine in the US to reach a national audience and the first US magazine to use the word “lesbian” in the title.

Sappho Magazine

The magazine ‘Sappho’ is well recorded in the Glasgow Women’s Library archives. The first issue of Sappho, a magazine for lesbian readers, was published in April 1972 and represented a diverse, cross-class community. For this fabric magazine I focused on Sappho as it really stood out to me as a significant part of Lesbian History; it helped a lot of people understand themselves and feel accepted in the early 70s.

 

Dyke Crowned Homecoming Queen

Using a combination of quilting and beadwork, this banner is inspired by an issue of the Lesbian Tide magazine, titled Dyke Crowned Homecoming Queen.

Live! The Butchettes!

Live! The Butchettes! is a beaded sample. Created using the lacis beadloom.

Lesberado

A heavily embellished wall hanging, portraying the idyllic world of Lesberado. The imagery was found from a series of photographs labeled “San Francisco Pride March 1987.” Each panel has been created using the 15 x 15cm beadloom.

Final fabric samples

A series of samples that stand on their own as well as being able to be pieced together, creating multiple different banner compositions.

Collection of Lesbian Badges

Badges tie into the idea of wearing your sexuality. They are part of an additional collection aimed to view my work through a different context; focusing around a lesbian scout uniform. The uniform was born from the Lesbian archives which was found to be a running theme in the archival magazine illustrations.

Book of Lesbian Badges

Book of Beaded Samples