Josephine Knot Basket
Josephine Knot Basket with Sue Muldoon
A great basket to carry, display and store items! Starts with an intricate Josephine's Knot and radiate the ribs out to create a rounded shape. No limits on your imagination. Use reed now, but use the concept to add other media (wool, fabric, cording, seagrass, etc) to make a unique basket.
Basket colors will be jewel tones. Finished size is approximately 12” x 12” x 12”
This class is presented in collaboration with John C. Campbell Folk School and Lessonface. Class capacity is 12 students. Registration closes on February 10. Students are invited to attend a large group Orientation and Closing Ceremony to connect with various classes online.
Class Materials
Your class registration fee includes a materials kit with a value of $50 shipped to your door. Residents outside the USA will pay the difference in shipping.
Students will also want to provide:
clippers or scissors, water source, towel
Age Range
All Ages
Skill Level
Beginner / Intermediate
Contact the Teacher
Send a direct message from the teacher's profile page with any questions you might have about the class.
About the John C. Campbell Folk School & Lessonface
Since 1925, the John C. Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, North Carolina has transformed lives, and brought people together in a nurturing environment for experiences in learning and community life that spark self-discovery. Since 2012, Lessonface has connected more than 30,000 students with over 2,500 great teachers for live music, language, and arts lessons online, delivering on our mission to help students achieve their goals while treating teachers equitably.
When
Single 6.5-hour session with a break on Saturday, February 24, at 10 am ET | 7 am PT | 15:00 UTC.
Enrolled students receive 30-day access to the video recording of the class.
Book 1:1 online lessons with Sue Muldoon on their Lessonface profile.

Sue Muldoon
Sue divides her time between 3-dimensional and 2-dimensional work. She bounces back and forth between photography, web design and graphic design to seatweaving (chair caning, wicker repair, rush, splint, etc.) and basket weaving. Basketry started as an add-on to seat weaving because there was material begging to be used in more than one format.

