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Development of a fibre-arts design project with the elderly in the Western Cape
Author(s)
Stipp, Christel
Date Issued
2009
Type
Thesis
Publisher
Cape Peninsula University of Technology
Abstract
The focus of the Fibre-Arts Design Project (FADP) was to address issues of ageism in South
Africa, particularly focusing on addressing the elderly's socio-economic well-being in Cape
Town. This was achieved through the creation and implementation of a socially designed
programme that was specifically aimed at empowering the elderly through the implementation
of craft skills-training, as well as through the development and fabrication of a marketable
women's accessory range. The FADP, which is a socially driven, income-generating model,
improved the elderly's craft skills and revived hands-on creativity, as well as preserved and
restored some of the elderly's disused and forgotten traditional craft skills and techniques.
The success of the FADP is also attributed largely to its investment in people, whilst
simultaneously and actively promoting strategies of knowledge and skills creation as a
preferred and viable path to sustaining a community's creative and economic life. This is an
important aspect when implementing social design programmes amongst similar particular
disadvantaged communities and ensuring their sustainability.
Africa, particularly focusing on addressing the elderly's socio-economic well-being in Cape
Town. This was achieved through the creation and implementation of a socially designed
programme that was specifically aimed at empowering the elderly through the implementation
of craft skills-training, as well as through the development and fabrication of a marketable
women's accessory range. The FADP, which is a socially driven, income-generating model,
improved the elderly's craft skills and revived hands-on creativity, as well as preserved and
restored some of the elderly's disused and forgotten traditional craft skills and techniques.
The success of the FADP is also attributed largely to its investment in people, whilst
simultaneously and actively promoting strategies of knowledge and skills creation as a
preferred and viable path to sustaining a community's creative and economic life. This is an
important aspect when implementing social design programmes amongst similar particular
disadvantaged communities and ensuring their sustainability.
Additional information
Thesis (MTech (Fashion Design))--Cape Peninsula University of Technology, 2009.
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