Huge, Nearly-Wordless, Embroidered Facsimiles of Emily Dickinson’s Handwritten Manuscripts, by Jen Bervin

EMILY DICKINSON

The Gorgeous Nothings: Emily Dickinson’s Envelope Poems 

 

Emily Dickinson’s Handwritten Manuscripts Embroidered below

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Emily Dickinson’s poems went unpublished during her life and for decades after her death. When they were published, nearly all of her creative, idiosyncratic punctuation and personal notation marks were deleted or changed to more familiar, standardized, comfortable, and boring marks.

Jen Bervin, The Composite Marks of Emily Dickinson's Fascicle 28

Jen Bervin’s huge quilts (up to 40 feet by 8 feet!) flip that script: she has removed nearly all the words, leaving patterns of crosses, dashes, underscores, and strikethroughs. Bervin’s pieces give prominence to the marks most of us have never seen.

Jen Bervin, The Composite Marks of Emily Dickinson's Fascicle 28, detail.

What elevates these past curiosity up to artwork, for me, is that they use craft and materials to prompt worthwhile questions. For instance: Are these marks as insignificant, as non-signifying as they seem, spattered up there in red thread? Or, are they a thoroughly personal writing method (and how would I feel if my notebooks were turned inside out and shaken for weird punctuation like this?) Or, are…

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Schizophrenia embroidery at The Glore Psychiatric Museum

Schizophrenia embroidery….the need to express oneself comes out in so many ways!

embroidery (1)

 

at the Gore Psychiatric Museum there is a psychological striptease in the form of an embroidery…read the post below for more info

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THE AESTHETICS OF GENEROSITY: a man gives his shoes to barefoot bus passenger

Wow, what a beautiful story!   It’s scientifically proven that being generous is not only good for our souls but for our health as wealth.  Below is a great related story!

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The Cinta Wrap

Ladies, wear your hair like a Mayan!

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Our fabulous product designer Tara Whalley gives a step-by-step guide to rocking the Cinta wrap – a fresh take on a classic Guatemalan style! Wraps will be available on our Etsy site soon!

Photos by Casey Ann

Model Juliane Kaatzsch

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Learning how to surf the waves of time

Growing old–it’s mandatory if you want to stay alive.  Some people do it with more style than others.

Here are a couple of examples to take into consideration.  The first is that of Mick Jagger singing No Expectations. The song was first released in 1968 and was the flip side of Street Fighting Man. The highlight  was Brian Jones playing the steel guitar. The song was never one of my favorites.  That is, not until 2003 when Jagger gave the song, and his voice, pathos.  Thirty-five years had past since the initial version yet Jagger, instead of giving the idea of having aged, gave the impression of having matured.

BEFORE

AFTER

In 1971, Led Zepplin released Black Dog. Robert Plant a.k.a “I’m Sexy and I Know It” loved to sing “Gonna make you burn, gonna make you sting” wearing tight fitting pants and an unbuttoned shirt. Yeah, because singing a song with words like that was pretty sweaty stuff.

Robert Plant BEFORE

Thirty-five years past here, too, and, around 2007, Plant began performing with bluegrass star, Alison Krauss. Once again he was singing Black Dog.  But this time Plant kept his shirt buttoned. Because when you reach a certain age, there’s no need to get sweaty.

Robert Plant AFTER

So what’s the purpose of this post? No real purpose. Just a simple reflection  about growing older.  And about affronting the inevitable change.

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