Sunday, April 5, 2015

Travel Journals by Janet Fredericks

I was up at Dartmouth Hitchcock Hospital visiting a friend in the oncology unit. During a lunch break I came across an exhibit of this wonderful Travel Journals by Janet Fredericks. They were absolution enchanting . . . so personal . . . so unique . . . so transpiring . . .

Janet is teaching a class in Middlebury, VT this May 2015. It is an evening class for 4 Wednesdays in May (6-27, 2015) at the Middlebury Studio School (http://middleburystudioschool.org/instructors/):
“Keeping a Travel Journal” for a fun documentation of your adventures . . . learn to draw, collage and paint to capture your travels. No experience necessary. We will construct a small book in which to collect our creations. Bring photos from a previous trip, images from magazines of a place you’d like to go…your dream vacation…all other materials will be provided"




















Contact Janet for classes or instruction:
www.janetfredericksstudio.com
janetfrederisstudio@gmail.com
802-453-7757


Sunday, March 1, 2015

The Echizen Papermaking Song!

My friend Allison who is a Japanese translator sent me this link!

How sweet is this!

Thanks Allison!




suku 【· 
  • godan く verb → conjugation:
    1. to make something (i.e. paper) from wet, pulpy material by spreading it thin and drying it

The Echizen Papermaking Song
You can listen to it on YouTube: http://youtu.be/EA7slxjlRpc



五箇に生まれて紙漉き習うて 横座弁慶で人廻す

Born in Goka, learn papermaking , now managing a paper studio.

(Goka is another name when people call this paper village. Go means five. The village is composed of the five towns. )


神の授けをそのまま継いで 親も子も漉く 孫も漉く

Taking after what God gave, parents and children make paper, grandchildren make paper.

(God here means Paper goddess worshipped by people since 719 )



七つ八つから紙漉き習うて ネリの合加減 まだ知らぬ

Having learned papermaking since age seven or eight, still don't know how to mix neri very well.


(Neri is how we called `the mediation aid` to mix materials well in water.)





Thursday, February 19, 2015

Architectural Digest Home Design Show 2015 - NYC

Architectural Digest Home Design Show 
2015 - NYC

I was in New York for 6 days with Natalie Blake Studios. 
My new job is the Business / Marketing Manager for NBS. 

Natalie and I went down, stayed in an AirBnB 3 blocks from Pier 94 convention center and worked the show for four days, with a day of set-up at the beginning and a day of site visits on Monday. It was a stimulating adventure.

Natalie at the Natalie Blake Studios booth! @natalieblakeart




Lots to see on the floor of the design show! Amy Genser makes painting from rolled paper. They were selling off the wall . . . sort of seascapes and landscapes. Check out her website: http://www.amygenser.com











Near the floral arrangements were these wonderful paper cutouts. These were beautiful and especially next to the real live flowers!








Lots of great graphics on paper and fabric and cow hide. I love the whole cow!


Check out this "living wall"! Wouldn't this be a great way to grow food ~ and just go up and cut your own salad for dinner! Or herbs for your drink! The possibilities are endless!






Also in this area were lampshades for the cafeteria - chicken wire covered in paper pulp. I like the idea although the end result was a little provincial. I could image this with a more sophisticated finished piece. Maybe this summer at Still Water Bindery!



Met new friends across from the NBS booth - Mother is the painter and her husband came up from Washington and her daughter in from London UK to help her with her show! Lovely family.

Anyway, it was good to be in the city and get some culture and sushi!



We ended up at "The Bitter End" in Greenwich Village ~ Joni Mitchell sang there! 

I was happy to have walked on the same ground that she had! 
Even saw Martha Stewart at the ADHDShow!





Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Book Packing In McLeod Ganj

Julie is one of the wonderful yoga teachers I studied with in Florida, when I was living down there for four months during the winter of 2013. Julie went to India to study yoga and needed to ship 27 books back to the USA . . . and so needed a "book bag" to send them in . . . I just love this post! Enjoy!


This article is from Julie's blog Yogaressa . . .

Book Packing In McLeod Ganj

Book-packing-McLeod-Ganj
How can FedEx compete against this charming setup?
Yes, that’s Book Packing in McLeod Ganj, not Backpacking. The latter being a travel adventure for those exploring the Himalayas in (most likely) scruffy-baggy-unisex trousers and cotton rasta-colored friendship bracelets; seeking budget accommodation, ethnic meals and meaningful inter-cultural connections with locals and likeminded international explorers. The former being an adventure of a different sort – involving 27 books and a cheerful chappy armed with calico, a big sewing needle and red candle wax.
I had somehow amassed 27 books during my yoga teacher training: some of them part of the Kailash Tribal School of Yoga curriculum and some of them literary treats I just couldn’t resist.
  • Happy circumstance: Snapping up inexpensive and interesting yoga books
  • Problem: Lugging them home in an already-bulging suitcase
  • Solution: Aforesaid cheerful chappy with his tailoring skills
Book-packing-McLeod-Ganj
Sewing the calico cover


Shipping things home will never be the same again.
No boring FedEx or UPS box required. Instead, you take your books to a tailor, who takes a break from sewing his colorful Tibetan wall hangings to create a custom-sewn, cloth-covered, neatly packaged bundle, ready for its voyage home. All of this done while laughing and smiling as he works speedily on his little Sagar sewing machine, weaving his tailor mastery around your precious yoga books.
Book-packing-McLeod-Ganj
Red wax seal to add a special touch


He finishes off the final seam by hand, with a big needle and thick thread. When he holds a red stick over a flame and drips hot wax along the seam, evoking the nostalgia of a bygone era, it makes you want to press a Downton Abbey signet ring into it, to seal the deal. Seriously.

Book-packing-McLeod-Ganj
Signed, sealed and ready for mailing
Book-packing-McLeod-Ganj
You’ve Got Mail.
Two weeks later at home, when my parcel of books arrive, the cream calico material now dirty and scuffed but books intact, I’m immediately transported back to Jogiwara Road, McLeod Ganj, to visions of nimble sewing fingers making an art form out of mailing things home.

For McLeod Ganj Travelers – How to send parcels from McLeod Ganj, with minimum fuss:
McLeod-Ganj-post-office
Left to right, on Jogiwara Rd : tailor with parcel packing, Tibet Quality Bakery, post office.
It’s an art form in itself, but it can also be a bit frustrating if you don’t know the ropes. In the event that other travelers hit the search button on how to send their books or other items home from McLeod Ganj, here’s the scoop:
  1. Pick up a customs form (one form per parcel) from the internet services place, up the stairs just past the post office on Jogiwara Road. Also ask them to make two copies of your passport per parcel.
  2. Fill out the forms ahead of time and make sure you state the books are personal and used.
  3. Take your books (or clothing, or souvenirs) to the happy guy at the store that makes Tibetan wall hangings a few doors down from the post office, just past the Tibet Quality Bakery (see photo). You can’t miss him, as the storefront is filled with hanging pieces of colorful Tibetan material. Look for “Parcel Packing Here” sign.
  4. Watch, in awe, as he speedily sews a cloth parcel around your books, and seals it with red candle wax. The price for the parcel wrapping service was nominal – I think I paid less than 200 rupees.
  5. Write your address and the sender’s address (your hotel or someone you know in McLeod Ganj) in big letters on the parcel. Friendly tailor loaned me his permanent marker pen.
  6. Take your parcel, customs form and passport copies to the post office BEFORE NOON – when I was there, I was told they only do international parcels in the morning, even though they are open in the afternoon. This part was fairly expensive – I paid $60 to ship 27 books home, but excess luggage on a domestic flight would have cost a lot more.
  7. IMPORTANT! Take CASH with you to the post office. I didn’t have enough money and hot-tailed it down the road to the ATM, to find it was offline, then to the bank to cash money, and ran back to the post office, huffing and panting, with just minutes to spare. (And then I left my raincoat poncho behind and had to go back later to fetch it. Much deep yoga breathing required to remain calm!)
  8. The books arrived safely, and took just over 2 weeks to reach me in the US.
Happy Book Packing and Safe Travels!