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Bazaar Bayar





A chance encounter in a small Aegean town while traveling in Turkey refocused my direction in life, when I met my vintage textile expert husband Abit. I was a clothing and interior designer in my native California, with stints in design centers around the world. Experiencing new cultures, seeing how others live and create is the best possible design inspiration. Seeking amazing textiles and the cultures which produce them is a joy my curious nature will never give up.

In 1999, Abit and I, each avid Turkish, Kurdish and Central Asian textile collectors before we met, started Bazaar Bayar in Selcuk, the town next to the ancient ruins of Ephesus. We surrounded ourselves with woven treasures from these cultures in a small shop in the exact location where we met. I have degrees in design, but Abit grew up watching the women in his native region of Mardin in Turkey’s southeast weave kilims and other functional yet beautiful items for their homes. Learning to weave was once a prerequisite before woman could marry. My mother-in-law’s generation was the last to weave for themselves.

We spent a decade in our Bazaar Bayar shop, collecting and selling vintage kilims and carpets, embroidered suzanis, and vintage Ottoman and Central Asian jewelry. We also sold the hand-knits I created, inspired by the local women who knit and crochet in profusion. From intricately patterned colorful socks to the exquisite flower and fruit ornaments called “oya” that adorn headscarves, I am entranced by the crafts average Turkish women still make.

So in the summer of 2010, we moved to Istanbul’s Old City, to launch a workshop to support local unsung artisans: women who still weave, knit, and crochet in the traditions of timeless Turkish handcraft. Istanbul is a magical, challenging city with a diverse population of women. Some of these are educated women, reviving crafts as a hobby or a career. There are other women with fewer opportunities who’d like to earn money within a safe community of women. Our workshop will also give traveling women a chance to meet Turkish women through classes we’ll offer and craft tours we’ll host. Hands engaged to learn new skills and teach traditional ones, spinning yarns, clacking needles and drinking tea together, we’ll share the common language of craft with stories from our lives and about our cultures.

Catherine Salter Bayar creates knitwear, seeks textile treasures, and writes from her new home in an ancient city. Visit her blogs:  Tales from Turkey and expat+HAREM, the global niche, where she is a serial guest blogger.




Location: Istanbul, Turkey  
Online Shop: Etsy
Blog:  Tales from Turkey
Languages spoken:  English, Spanish, Turkish...next: Kurdish




Bazaar Bayar: Cutural textiles from Turkey and 
Hand Knits by Designer Catherine Salter Bayar




 





Bazaar Bayar on Facebook





Tags: Handwoven, handknit, Turkey, ethnic (hate that word though), kilim, suzani, nomad, Uzbek, Kurdish, Ephesus, Selcuk

4 comments:

  1. Catherine has been a guest on my blog many times. You can read her wonderful posts following this link:

    http://fiberfocus.blogspot.com/search/label/Catherine%20Salter%20Bayar

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  2. I'll be updating TAFA members about the opening of our handcrafts workshop in Istanbul this summer, showcasing handmade needlecraft from local women, offering classes on Turkish arts to visitors, and offering a gathering place for women from all cultures to create. More news soon!

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  3. We were recently featured in Turkey's national English language daily Today's Zaman, with nearly a full page article about our life and work, and the launch of handcraft workshops this fall in Istanbul's Sultanahmet, home to the legendary Hagia Sophia and Topkapi Palace. If you love culture and crafting, our workshops will be the hands-on place to learn about traditional Turkish handknits, crochet, embroidery, felting and more, in the midst of history. Read the article here:

    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/news-217482-132-needlework-knits-up-a-common-language.html

    Please note that I used TAFA as my info link at the end of the article...hope it brings all of us more traffic!

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  4. Check out this article about our upcoming handcrafts workshops, in Istanbul starting march 2011:

    http://www.handeyemagazine.com/content/east-meets-west

    ReplyDelete

“Drive a nail home and clinch it so faithfully that you can wake up in the night and think of your work with satisfaction,- a work at which you would not be ashamed to invoke the Muse”
-Henry David Thoreau

In our case, it would be the needle or other fiber tool. Drive it home! And, we all thank you for your words, left here to these good folks. Invoke your Muse!

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