Peggy Osterkamp grew up outside Akron, Ohio and got her teaching degree at Ohio State University. After graduation she moved to California and taught in a junior high school in San Francisco’s Chinatown.
She learned to weave while on sabbatical leave at Pacific Basin School of Textiles in Berkeley, California where she became passionate about the craft. She apprenticed with Jim Ahrens, the “A” in AVL at the Atelier at Pacific Basin.
Osterkamp moved to Washington DC and found weavers excited to learn the production weaving techniques she practiced with Jim Ahrens. Then her teaching and weaving lives collided and her national career as a weaving teacher and author began. In Washington she volunteered at the Textile Museum which became her “home away from home”.
For seven years while living in New York City she taught weaving in the surrounding area and around the country and began writing her New Guide to Weaving Series. Working at the Cooper-Hewitt Museum with Milton Sonday was an exceptional experience because of her love for weave structures and complex weaves. She researched 14th and 17thcentury silk lampas fabrics with Mr. Sonday as well as other complex textiles.
Osterkamp has lived in the San Francisco Bay Area for the last 35 years where she taught semester-length weaving classes at City College of San Francisco, wrote the 3-volume New Guide to Weaving and the comprehensive book, “Weaving for Beginners”. After her retirement she continued weaving her own art pieces.
Artist/weaver, Peggy Osterkamp has been known nationally for her teaching and instructional books about the art and techniques of weaving for over 40 years.
Few people knew that she was creating art pieces during this long period of time. Now she feels it is time to share her creations with art lovers and she exhibits in the Bay Area.
As she notes, “I don’t make anything “useful.”