The Culture of Cloth

The First Makers: Ancient Mediterranean & Near East

9 min · 23 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The First Makers: Ancient Mediterranean & Near East

Descripción

While researching the Goddess Project, I came across something that stopped me completely. Every culture, independently and without contact with each other, created a goddess who presided over weaving. Not because ideas travelled along trade routes, but separately. Across thousands of years and thousands of kilometres. In this episode I walk through the oldest part of that record, from Uttu, the Sumerian spider goddess who dates to 3000 BCE, through Inanna, Neith, Hathor, Isis, and Athena. Six goddesses, roughly 5000 years, and one argument running through all of them: making was never just craft.  Part of The Goddess Project series. Find the companion carousel on Instagram 🔗 link below https://www.instagram.com/p/DYsJxDcAeiW/?igsh=aWo3Y3Jybmt0ZGxx [https://www.instagram.com/p/DYsJxDcAeiW/?igsh=aWo3Y3Jybmt0ZGxx]

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9 episodios

episode The First Makers: The Americas artwork

The First Makers: The Americas

Before there was a world, there was a thread. In this episode of First Makers, I’m looking at two very different models of the same idea. Divinity and thread as the origin of everything that matters. First, Mama Ocllo, sent by the Inca sun god Inti to teach the first women to spin and weave. She is a culture-hero, not a weaver herself, whose myth explains where an entire craft tradition came from. Then Spider Grandmother, who in Navajo and Hopi tradition isn’t a teacher at all, but the maker of the world itself. She spun existence out of clay and attached every living thing to her by a single thread of her own silk. Part of The Goddess Project, my ongoing series on ancient goddesses, the history of draped cloth, and why what women make has always mattered more than it’s been given credit for. Cover art by Susan Seddon Boulet

Ayer9 min
episode The First Makers: West Africa & the Diaspora artwork

The First Makers: West Africa & the Diaspora

The First Makers: West Africa and the Diaspora This edition is different from every other one in this series. Every tradition we’ve covered so far came to us through a written documentary record (the Kojiki, the Rigveda, Hesiod). The traditions in this edition travelled through the worst thing human beings have ever done to each other. And they survived. In this episode I cover: Anansi (ah-NAHN-see) – the Akan spider trickster of Ghana, whose web became the origin of kente cloth.  The Dogon of Mali – whose sage Ogotemmêli described the loom as a living body through which divine word enters the world. To weave at night would be to weave silence and darkness into the cloth.  Oshun (O-shun) – Yoruba goddess of freshwater, fertility, and the creative arts. When the other gods failed to populate the Earth, it was Oshun who succeeded. Yemoja (yeh-MOH-jah) – Yoruba mother of waters, mother of many gods, whose presence in the Americas is one of the most remarkable stories of religious survival in human history. Because then the Middle Passage happened. Approximately 12.5 million Africans were taken from their homes and forced onto ships crossing the Atlantic. They arrived with nothing except what they remembered and they kept it alive. In Brazil it became Candomblé. In Cuba, Lucumí. In Haiti, sacred textile flags were made inside Vodou temples to honour the spirits.  This is the First Makers thesis in its fullest form. A tradition that survived the unsurvivable because the people who carried it refused to let it die. The First Makers is part of the Goddess Project – a long-form series tracing the history of draped cloth as political act, culminating in the Esther sewing pattern in August/September 2026. Diasporic Threads: Black Women, Fibre and Textiles. https://www.commonthreadspress.co.uk/products/diasporic-threads-black-women-fibre-textiles-revised-edition [https://www.commonthreadspress.co.uk/products/diasporic-threads-black-women-fibre-textiles-revised-edition]

22 de jun de 202613 min
episode The First Makers: South & East Asia artwork

The First Makers: South & East Asia

Every culture created a goddess who presided over making. But not all of them did it the same way. This episode introduces two categories.  The first: goddesses whose mythology is explicitly about weaving. Documented, primary sources, this is what the texts actually say.  The second: goddesses that weavers chose. Figures whose domains of creativity, wisdom and skill made them the natural patrons of women at the loom, even though weaving isn’t the centre of their story. Both categories are true. They’re just true in different ways. In this episode I cover: Amaterasu (Japan) — the sun goddess whose most significant mythological moment begins in a weaving hall, documented in the Kojiki (712 CE) and Nihon Shoki (720 CE) Zhinu and Orihime (China and Japan) — the Weaver Girl of the Milky Way, a myth over 2,600 years old that travelled the Silk Road and became Japanese Leizu (China) — the empress who discovered silk when a cocoon fell into her tea, invented the loom, and was eventually deified for it Saraswati (India) — goddess of knowledge and the arts, and the patron weavers in Kanchipuram have invoked before beginning new patterns for centuries Benzaiten (Japan) — who began as Saraswati in India, travelled through China, and arrived in Japan transformed Dewi Sri (Java, Bali, Lombok) — the rice goddess in whose name women across Indonesia have always woven sacred cloth You never find a god of weaving. Not once, across any of these traditions. Every time, in every culture, the act of making cloth belongs to the feminine divine. The First Makers is part of the Goddess Project, a long-form series tracing the history of draped cloth from the beginning of time, culminating in the release of the Esther sewing pattern in August–September 2026.

13 de jun de 202614 min
episode A Compass, Not a Photocopier: Trend Forecasting, AI and Why Origin Matters with Tully Walter artwork

A Compass, Not a Photocopier: Trend Forecasting, AI and Why Origin Matters with Tully Walter

Tully Walter is a Strategic Futures Director at Soon Futures and this is one of the most substantial conversations I've had on the show. We get into what trend forecasting actually is (observed, invented, or accelerated) and how the answer changes depending on who's paying. We talk about cultural appropriation and why origin gives a trend its meaning, what happens when that context gets stripped out, and why the Prada sandal situation was an after-the-fact correction that should have been built in from the start. We talk about AI. About what it can synthesise, what it can't feel, and why a forecast that looks right isn't the same as a forecast that is right. Tully's line on this one is worth the whole episode: AI doesn't have the magic ✨ We also get into the trench coat problem in Australia, why independent makers can use trend forecasting differently to the big end of town, and what it actually feels like to stand in a room full of planners and fight for a trend you believe in. And we close with the Fashion Five: Tully's first childhood memory of fashion, her style icon, her favourite designer, and what makes her hopeful about the future of the industry. The Culture of Cloth is hosted by Veronica Tucker of Veronica Tucker the Label, a label built around the Goddess Project, a content series tracing the history of draped cloth as a political act. Find the Goddess Project content below: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/veronicatuckerthelabel?igsh=MXkxNGNtNTVlZDUycQ%3D%3D&utm_source=qr [https://www.instagram.com/veronicatuckerthelabel?igsh=MXkxNGNtNTVlZDUycQ%3D%3D&utm_source=qr] Substack: https://open.substack.com/pub/veronicatuckerthelabel [https://open.substack.com/pub/veronicatuckerthelabel] YouTube: https://youtube.com/@veronicatuckerthelabel?si=JvM1ZGgv9Uy-xyGl [https://youtube.com/@veronicatuckerthelabel?si=JvM1ZGgv9Uy-xyGl]

5 de jun de 202653 min
episode The First Makers: Celtic & European artwork

The First Makers: Celtic & European

Every single one of these goddesses survived, but none of them survived intact. In this episode I trace the weaving goddesses of Celtic and European mythology (Brigid, Arianrhod, Frigg, and Holda) and the pattern running through all of them. They were rewritten, renamed, absorbed into new religions, turned into fairy tales, reduced to saints. Brigid survived by becoming a saint. Holda survived by becoming a fairy tale. Arianrhod survived in a manuscript written by people who tried to contain her. Frigg survived as a constellation, the stars of Orion’s Belt named for her spinning tool. And then there’s the distaff. The broomstick. The spindle that cursed Sleeping Beauty. The ordinary tools of women’s making, reframed as instruments of evil. This is Edition II of the First Makers series, part of the Goddess Project, tracing the history of draped cloth as a political act. The carousel is live on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/p/DY8g1jMgefZ/?igsh=aW04bXZ3N3I1eXd2 [https://www.instagram.com/p/DY8g1jMgefZ/?igsh=aW04bXZ3N3I1eXd2]

30 de may de 202611 min