Just back from 6 days in Devon discussing what role crafts have in helping create a sustainable future. The setting was the magnificent Dartington Hall. I came away inspired and am now wondering if I can manage to pass on some of that inspiration just through blog posts, I’ll try my best though as a medium it can’t compare to a real person talking passionately. First though a little history of the venue.
Dartington Hall was built in the late 14th century between 1388 and 1400 for John Holland Earl of Huntingdon.
The Hall was mostly derelict by the time it was bought along with the 1200 acre estate by Leonard and Dorothy Elmhirst in 1925. The Elmhirst’s invested Dorothy’s considerable inheritance in the estate with the vision of reinvigorating the declining rural community.
The gardens are a joy to walk in and the ethos of the Elmhirst’s shines through here is a rather famous but wonderful quote from William Blake.
I was taken by this sweet chestnut tree, at a glance it looked like a Nash sculpture but I think it was the result of lighting strike killing a spiraling strip of bark which was painted with Arbrex, a practice which used to be common but nowadays arboroculturists prefer to leave wounds open to the air.







you have my attention, patiently waiting for more. great and important stuff to be focused on.
Lovely and interesting place.