Color Vibration

Color has frequency and frequency has vibration. I like color because it moves.

colorlessBefore

colorfulAfter

Above are fotos of La Sussurrata, our home on Paros. The top, when we first got it. The bottom, a few months later. As you can see, the easiest way to change the look of a room is by painting its walls.

Color is simultaneously form (because it occupies visual space) and content (because it expresses mood).

Warm colors move forward and cool colors recede. Some people are warm and some people are cool.

she wore red on red
Paolina Bonaparte, Napoleon’s sister, while planning a party at Villa Borghese in Rome, learned that her arch rival was to wear a red dress. So the night before the party, Paolina had the walls covered with red fabric to obliterate the presence of her rival’s dress and who was wearing it.

Sameness neutralizes.

Itten  Chart

Itten color Chart

Itten charts, invented by Swiss painter and theorist, Johannes Itten, show how the rapport between one color and another changes the color itself. The visual behaviour of red next to green is not the same as that of the same red next to orange.

People are like colors. They change according to who they’re with.

Color affects our mood.

I like black because it intensifies any color that’s placed next to it. I don’t like brown. Like wilted flowers, brown is the color of that which has gone away.

Research does suggest that color can affect your being and that your choice of color or combinations of color is significant to your mood. Color preferences are not necessarily fixed and  will vary even within a given day depending on psychological circumstances.

To limit your desire for food, eat off a blue plate because, for some reason, blue is an appetite suppressant. Alfred Hitchcock knew this.  One time he invited people to dinner he considered pompous and offered them food that had been tinted blue with food coloring.  It was very hard for his guests to eat blue soup, blue fish, blue salad. Would you eat an egg white that was blue?

Much of the information above is via Daily Aesthetics and for more color related links, go HERE.

Posted in Paros | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments

Summer Clutch

These purses were part of an exhibition, Muy Marcottage, held at M’arte Gallery in Liguria.

recycled clutch purse

Summer clutch

Above is a clutch bag made from a transparent detergent bottle. The top of the bottle was cut off and replaced with a crocheted flap made from “plarn” (plastic bag yarn). It’s transparent making it easy to find what you need! A bit funky but fun!

Muy MarcottagePatchwork clutch

This, instead, was a worn out cosmetic case that I cleaned then covered with a patchwork of candy  and other misc. wrappers. They were sewn on by hand.

Posted in Muy Marcottage | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Paros map

Paros Island Map

Posted in Paros | Tagged | Leave a comment

Music on Paros

she played the lyre

from BEBINA BUNNY’S CABINET OF CURIOSITIES

Parians like music and live music is a norm during the summer. Last night there was a free concert at Parikia’s Manto Mavrogenous Square by Pantelis Thalassinos, a well-known Greek singer who spends much of his time on Paros. Wasn’t it lovely of him to give back to the island he loves so much?


Yiannis Parios is a well-known singer from Paros.  A few years ago he gave a concert, too.  It wasn’t free but he donated the proceeds towards buying a much needed air ambulance to transport islanders to a hospital in Athens, if necessary.


Generosity is a form of aesthetics.

And every year my friend, Athena Perantinou, organizes the Jazz Academy here on Paros. Soon the port of Parikia will be full of people getting off the boat with musical instruments. It gives a frizz to the air. People who have never met will soon be moved by the same music.

Music helps us connect  to others.

Have you seen the video of Helen Keller at Martha Graham’s Dance Studio?  Incredible!  Despite the fact that she is deaf, Helen can feel the music’s vibrations and moves her hand in tune with its rhythm.


Rhythm is magical enticing the body to move. And movement is medicine.

Music is The Language Of The Universe

Posted in Sound & Music | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Tutorial: how to make curtains from plastic bags

Below is the entrance to our house here on Paros. We’ve given it the name La Sussurrata – in Agatha Christie books, houses always seem to have a name so I decided our house needed a name, too. “Sussurrare” means, in Italian, “whisper” or “murmur” thus La Sussurrata indicates the house that’s murmured about. And it’s murmured about because of how much recycling is a part of the decor. You can see more fotos of La Sussurrata HERE and HERE.

plastic bag rugcrocheted plastic bag rug made using plarn

The idea of turning plastic bags into “plarn” to use for crochet has been around for sometime now. Most all of the bag is used save for the handles and the bottom seam. But there’s a way to recycle those, as well. This tutorial focuses on using the plastic bag handles to make curtains that are so easy to make that even children can make them!

plastic bag

plasticsSeam handles

First of all, you have to cut up your bags as indicated above–the same way you do when making plarn. So after cutting up your bags, it’s best to first make the plarn putting aside the seams and handles.

plarnPlarn balls

Once finished making plarn, take the handles and start tying them together leaving the seams aside for a future project.

plastic tiesHandles tied together

Keep tying the handles together until you get a strand the desired length. Here on Paros, I used these curtains for the doors leading to the balcony and to the terrace as a means of keeping the doors opened but the flies out. So, obviously, my strands are the length of the door way.  And the number of strands needed depends upon how “dense” you want your curtain to be.

plastic curtainsPlastic tie curtain

plastic curtainsBalcony

plastic curtainsTerrace

For the balcony, I tied one extreme of the strands to plastic rings (from the openings of water bottles) as well as to  milk bottle necks. Then I strung the strands on a piece of plastic rope. For the terrace, I used plarn to crochet a piece of “rope” the length of the doorway then tied the strands onto them.


plastic curtain
Doorway curtain

plastic curtain
Bathroom window

plastic packaging
Plastic packaging

And here on the island, there’s the problem of plastic water bottles and their  packaging.  This  plastic packaging can be cut into strips that are then tied together to make curtains, too.

Make sure that the plastic bags you use for plarn and curtain making are not biodegradable otherwise they will eventually crumble away. Luckily, Italians have become more aware of environmental problems and, since 2011 in Italy, non-biodegradable plastic bags have been outlawed meaning objects made from them could become collector’s items! Plastic bags are not always labelled as to what kind of plastic they’re made from but often you can tell by touching them—the biodegradable have a kind of oily feeling to them.

Coming soon: how to recycled the plastic bag seams.

Posted in Crafts | Tagged , , , , , | 6 Comments