2026 Summer Institute Flax From Field to Fabric | Landis Valley Village & Farm Museum

$325.00 – $400.00
Friday, June 26, 2026, at 9:00 AM – Sunday, June 28, 2026, at 4:00 PM EDT
The 2026 Summer Institute Flax From Field to Fabric workshop is an in-depth educational experience that reveals how one of the world’s oldest cultivated plants becomes one of humanity’s most essential textiles. Hosted at Landis Valley Village & Farm Museum, this workshop guides participants through the complete lifecycle of flax—from the way it grows in the field to the historic processes used to turn it into strong, beautiful linen fiber. This class is ideal for fiber artists, spinners, weavers, educators, homesteaders, and anyone interested in traditional agricultural and textile practices.
For centuries, Pennsylvania German communities relied on flax as a cornerstone of domestic textile production. Families grew flax in their fields, processed it through labor-intensive steps, and turned the resulting fibers into linen garments, household textiles, and everyday necessities. In this workshop, participants trace these same steps using the tools and techniques once common throughout rural Pennsylvania.
The workshop begins with an introduction to flax cultivation. Participants learn how flax is planted, tended, harvested, and prepared for processing. The workshop emphasizes heritage agricultural knowledge, including soil conditions, planting rhythms, harvesting cues, and the importance of retting—a controlled rotting process that loosens the fibers from the woody core of the plant. Understanding flax in its vegetal form gives participants a deep appreciation for the skill and patience required before any spinning or weaving can begin.
The next portion of the workshop focuses on the historic tools and methods used to transform flax into workable fiber. Participants will see and use tools such as the break, scutching board, and hackles—implements designed to separate and refine fibers. These stages of processing reveal how much labor went into even the simplest linen cloth, and they provide valuable hands-on experience for those who wish to pursue linen production on their own.
As the workshop progresses, students learn how to spin flax into thread. Using traditional spinning wheels or distaff-supported methods, participants experience firsthand how flax behaves differently from wool or cotton, requiring specific hand movements and tension control. Instructors offer step-by-step guidance, helping students master the fundamentals of spinning flax into strong, smooth thread. Participants also learn about the traditional uses of tow and line flax, the difference between fine and coarse grades of linen, and how households historically used every part of the plant.
With newly spun thread in hand, participants then explore the basics of weaving or preparing linen for finishing. Depending on the scope of the session, the workshop may include demonstrations of loom weaving, fiber finishing techniques, and the processes required to bleach or soften linen. Whether the session includes loom use or focuses solely on fiber preparation, participants leave with a clear understanding of how flax becomes fabric—and why linen was so highly valued historically.
Throughout the workshop, instructors weave in the rich historical context of Pennsylvania German farm life and household textile traditions. Participants learn how linen production shaped seasonal rhythms, family labor, domestic roles, and community-based sharing of tools and knowledge. The workshop connects agricultural history, women’s history, and craft history, making it especially meaningful for educators, museum professionals, and anyone interested in cultural heritage.
The 2026 Summer Institute Flax From Field to Fabric workshop is designed to be both educational and deeply hands-on. Participants engage directly with tools, fibers, and traditional processes, gaining practical skills they can continue to develop long after the session ends. All materials and equipment are provided, and no prior experience is necessary.
By the end of the workshop, participants will understand every stage in the transformation of flax into linen, including cultivation, harvesting, retting, breaking, scutching, hackling, spinning, and finishing. This immersive experience offers a rare chance to learn textile history in an authentic historic setting, surrounded by the agricultural landscape that shaped Pennsylvania German life.
Advance registration is recommended, as class sizes are limited to ensure high-quality instruction and hands-on learning.
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