Blue Mountain Baskets

Basketmaking & Growing Willow in the Blue Mountains, Ontario, Canada

Category: Dogwood baskets (page 2 of 2)

Week 24: Fresh Dogwood & Willow Rock Basket

Small stones and giant boulders that have all been dug out of our land here on top of the escarpment.

Okay, so sometimes I forget to soak my dry willow early enough in the week and have to be creative otherwise. This week I clipped my heirloom willow (the original willow here on our land- still don’t know what variety it is) and natural dogwood to make a basket out of this ‘green’ stuff.

It’s a struggle compared to lovely cultivated dried willow, but I also made it more challenging than need be! I was curious about starting a round base and then filling two sides with half moons of weaving to craft an oval. I was also trying for a rounded transition from base to sides so did no waling. Hence, the shape was difficult to work with.

Furthermore, I tried using long stakes from one side of the slate to the other so I had to tackle the border with thick butt ends and thin tips. AND I didn’t leave long enough ends of stakes to weave traditional borders. So In conclusion I have a truly rustic basket in shape, weave & material.

Since this basket is an ode to the heirloom willow and dogwood of the land, I have dedicated it to a rock collection. In it you will see the variety of rocks that come out of our soil. The glaciers rolled over this limestone escarpment dropping souvenir rocks from as far as the Canadian Shield on the other side of Georgian Bay! I sprayed the rocks with acrylic gloss clear coat to bring out the brilliant colours of the rocks just like when they are wet.

Maple rubs up against the basket. You can see the size of the boulder in comparison.

Week 22: Dogwood Round Basket with New Border

Dogwood basket as Toulouse emerges from the flowering Dogwood bush.

I harvested fresh Dogwood from the sides of our trails, so they are much younger and therefore greener than the traditional red stalks. Happily though the tips nicely contrasted against the butts in complementary colours of red and green.

Red tips contrast green butts, and the stripped waling adds variety.

The stakes and weavers were cut about 5 days earlier, so they had shrivelled a little which secured the bark. When I made the base stakes from freshly cut pieces, the bark came off easily, so that inspired me to try stripped fresh pieces for the waling.

The fresh cut Dogwood’s bark scraped off easily when making the base cross.

I did a full round of regular French randing and then for fun reversed the direction of the next set of weavers.

I wanted to try a border that would not need super bending since Dogwood is not as flexible as Willow. I discovered a fantastic instructional YouTube video from the Czech Republic by Kajjka Hátleová. This border was done in 3 stages and worked beautifully for the Dogwood.

Marie demonstrates the scale of the basket: it is one half-cat in diameter.

Week 12: Easter Egg Basket in Willow & Dogwood

I wanted to make a basket for our eggs and traditional Latvian pīragi buns (Granny buns as we call them!) at our family’s Easter gathering. 

This First Frame Basket Project (Shallow Dish) in Jon Ridgeon’s book looks just like an egg and by using Green Edna, Hakuro Nishiki willows and dogwood, I was able to ‘decorate’ the egg with stripes. I used freshly cut dogwood for the oval frame and green willow for the ribs. The dogwood weavers were cut offs from my log basket that were still weathering outside, so we will see what shade of red they end up after freezing outside and then being soaked with the willow.

Week 6: Dogwood log basket

I began this basket following Jon Ridgeon’s Log Basket chapter but had to modify along the way due to the challenging Dogwood.

Week 1: Dogwood shopping basket

Dogwood shopping basket

Wild Willow & Dogwood round basket

Dogwood & wild vine cat basket

Magnus sleeping in cat basket

Toulouse tries basket out for size

Round Dogwood basket

Within minutes of finishing the basket Toulouse squished in for a nap.

So excited after my workshop at Lakeshore Willows (see Catalan base post), I couldn’t wait to find willow to weave back home.  Instead I searched our Dogwood for young branchless stems and launched into my first basket from Jon Ridgeon’s book Willow Basketry: A How-to Guide.  This is his first project in the book called “Your First Basket”.  You can find this chapter for free on his website Jon’s Bushcraft, but I highly recommend ordering his book.  As an educator I am impressed with ability to clearly teach and illustrate each step with tips and tricks added for future baskets along the way.  He has organized the book in the order of increasing skill-level in each of the categories of baskets, so that by the end of the book you can successfully make 9 different stake-&-strand (round, oval and square) and frame baskets*.

*Editor’s update: Follow my 2018 Basket-a-week challenge as I work through each of Jon’s nine basket projects.

Fresh Dogwood’s lovely colour variation

Round basket in fresh Dogwood

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