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Peg
Laflam
(1936 - 2006)
Fiber artist, Designer, Innovator, Teacher
Peg was a member of the Society of Marbling since its
inception and participated in several of the marbling
conferences. She marbled on fabrics, which she then used in
her art pieces. Peg was
an accomplished artist, designer, innovator, teacher,
linguist, loving wife and mother with a wonderful sense of
humor and understanding. She studied languages at Cedar Crest
College, PA and at the Translators Institute in Heidelberg,
Germany, where she met her husband. She received a degree in
Graphic and Textile Art from the University of New Hampshire.
In her travels as a military wife and mother, Peg taught
English at the Iranian Military Academy in Tehran, Iran.
Subsequently, while stationed in Fort Devens, MA, Peg
embarked on a journey of discovery beginning with
needlework, which later expanded to fiber arts, design and
color theory. She received her certification from the
National Academy of Needle Arts
(NAN) then affiliated with the Valentine Museum of Richmond,
VA. Her culminating thesis was on Turkoman Rugs; "A Study of
the Rugs Woven by the Turkoman Tribes of Central Asia". Peg
went on to become a member of the staff of NAN and held
numerous positions including Director of Teacher
Certification and Director of Education, NAN's highest
offices. Peg was selected numerous times to be on the
faculty of the
American Needlepoint Guild
(ANG) National Seminars, the
Embroiderers Guild of America (EGA) National
Seminar's, Callaway Gardens School of Needle Art and NAN
Assemblies. In 2003, she was the recipient of a
Lifetime Achievement Award
by the organization. In addition, she taught extensively for
regional seminars and art guilds in the United States and
Canada.
An avid skier, an accomplished gardener, a voracious reader
and incredible cook, her talents and interests were many.
She especially enjoyed those days she spent with her husband
at their cottage on Lake Winnisquam. She was an active
parishioner of St. Mary of the Assumption Roman Catholic
Church in Tilton. It is her giving spirit and love of life
that touched everyone she met. The warm regard that everyone
held for her attests to how much she is loved in return.
Click
on the thumbnails below for a larger image.....
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