On the road furniture

Knitted mobile cabinets by Beril Cicek

When I saw Beril’s work featured on Treehugger, it was love at first sight.  Beril, a young Turkish designer studying in Milan, makes the most delightful portable knitted furniture + Beril’s website.

Somehow related: Lace & Crochet Furniture + Cool contemporary crochet furniture + Not Your Grandma’s Crafts + Loredana Bonora.

CROCHETED Daisy Chair + See more chAIrs HERE

Rejuvenating mid-Century Furniture with a twist!!! + Liliana Ovalle…Inspired by Mexico City’s Homeless!!! + Olivia Lee & Alienor de Chambrier @ Mint, London!!!

Baby style file loves: crocheted furniture + Hese designer stools boast a dainty, crochet-inspired latticework design that’s fine and fragile + Warm Autumn Idea: Knitted Furniture Cover ♥ Топла есенна идея: изплетени мебели.

CROCHET COVERED STOOL, Roundy-roundy-Hooky-hooky.

Sophie Degard’s cute and quirky brooches

Today I’m loving… STUNNING CROCHET LEAVES.

Marcantonio Raimondi Malerba, shipping crate turned into nightstand

Sleeping:  Cubesday: Nap In Your Cubicle With The Nappak + Urban Nomad 2.0: One Year in a Microhouse + The “Hat” resembles a rolled carpet or tent, but you can use it very well as a bed or a chair + City Camp bed.

A backpack shelter.

Blow Sofa is perfect for people living a nomadic life style”, haha! The sofa is made from 100% recycled paper dunnage bags with a metal rack and rubber straps. It is easy to transport when flat and simple to inflate.

Privacy Pop Tent

Nomadic furnitureNomadic Furniture 1 + Booth 1: garment + furniture = living space + It is not clear to me precisely where and when the Urban Nomad movement started + The first Nomadic Museum  realised by the architect Shigeru Ban – was constructed of 152 steel cargo containers, stacked 34 feet high and combined with largely recyclable and reusable materials to form the structural elements.

The project “Universal House”.

Furniture for the Modern Nomad: Stool Chair by Mariana Folberg

Savonarola Chair.

Posted in Furniture | Tagged , , , , | 5 Comments

Pat Nelson-Jimenez and Mexican Folk Art

 

One of the many wonderful things my hometown, San Antonio, has to offer is that of a multi-cultural atmosphere. Mexico, above all,  has certainly influenced San Antonio gifting its citizens with the aesthetics of color, animated music and spicy food.

Mexican Folk Art has always been a special love. So I asked my friend and folk artist, Pat Jimenez, to tell me a bit more about her work:

Pat Jimenez at San Antonio’s Starving Artist Show 2012

My name is Pat Jimenez, and I am a Mexican folk artist living in San Antonio, Texas. My passion for art began at the age of 13. My mother was from Coahuila, Mexico so I was raised in a culture where religious icons, traditional customs, and the use of bold colors all became an important source of inspiration for me.

I love painting in acrylic. But my first love is shrines. Each design is different and the figures I make are made with clay. My Dia De Los Muertos (Day of the Dead) is created in celebration of life rather than death. Others I create are using recycled and found objects.

If you would like to see more of my artwork, please visit me at Mi Corazon Artwerx or see my Facebook Page.

Thank you.

Fotos of some of Pat’s artwork:

St. Frances, Virgin Mary & Cathrine the Great

Virgin

Pat Jimenez

La Boda nicho

Lady of Guadalupe nicho

MORE MEXICAN FOLK ART:

NICHOS: a nicho is a decorative box usually set upon tables  to display religious icons +  Painted Nicho – St Antonio de Padua Southern Mexico + Cielito lindo nichos + Nichos at dosmujeres + Dream-Box “The Magic Hand” small.

What is a NICHO (Shrine)? When the Conquistadors came to the Americas, they brought with them many of the traditions of Spain, specially those having to do with religion. It was customary in Colonial homes to have a niche in the wall, or a “nicho” featuring the image of a saint, which would bless the house. These could be carved into a wall, or could be made of tin and hung on a wall. So, a nicho is essentially a recessed frame which holds either a figure or an image of a particular saint.

RETABLO: A retablo or lamina is a Latin American devotional painting, especially a small popular or folk art one using iconography derived from traditional Catholic church art.

Many many years ago I made some CARDBOARD RETABLOS bout The Aesthetics of Appreciaton: If you’re lucky and don’t know it, it’s like not being lucky at all. So to keep your luck alive, recognize it. Retablos are a means of offering thanks for this luck.

Lorenzo Family Retablos

Ex-voto Retablo – Octopus Attack + “Retablos: 10 Deleted Tongues” By Paul Martinez Pompa + Reproduction Religious Artifacts from Mexico + Scroll down to see Retablo de Frida (it depics the accident that she had as a young girl).

Retablos: Asking Favors + Powerful Retablo on the impact of immigration on people–compliments of Jay J. Johnson + A broad movement to save Malta and Gozo from drowning in a sea of speculation.

MILAGROs:

Milagros, also known as an ex-voto or dijes, are religious folk charms that are mostly made in Mexico but are also produced in some other countries of Central and South America. Milagros are an old tradition, used for healing purposes and as votive offerings in Mexico and areas of United States. In Spanish, the word “milagro” means “miracle”.

Milagros and my grandmother + Vintage Mexican Milagros on La Mariposa Gallery.

Jeri Moe at San Angel Folk Art + Metal Folk Art by Jeri Moe.

TAMATA/ταμάτα: The Greeks have votives very similar to Mexican milagros.  They’re called Tamata. Tamata + Tama.

Emotive votives + Shrine of Our Lady of Częstochowa EX-VOTIVES.

Posted in People | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Recycled baskets

Julibooli coiled basket at craftser

Ed Rossbach

Ed Rossbach, the basketmaker, weaver, and textile historian who changed the field of art in the fiber medium through his teaching, research, and writing, died October 7, 2002. He was 88 and had been in fragile health for five years + Ed Rossbach’s interest in baskets as a textile art began early in his career. With insatiable curiosity he has probed older civilizations to learn techniques and processes of making baskets and textiles. Through his exploration of rare weaves, netting, plaiting and dye processes he has emerged as a “harbinger of new departures and ideas”. ED ROSSBACH WOVEN PAPER BASKET.

No Boundaries: Contemporary Basketry

Lois Walpole’s blog.

How to Make Coiled Fabric  + Coiled Fabric Bowls + How to Sew a Fabric Bowl + DIY Fabric Scrap Bowl + Fiesta Bowl Time + How to make a coiled fabric basket using clothesline and strips of fabric.

Coiled paper basket + Some Fantastic Baskets! + Recycled Objects d’Art + Basket of shadows + COILED FIBRE ART WORK – ABORIGINAL BASKETS + Cereal box basket/nest + Fabric coil baskets.

Recycled tin can end basket

Inspiration: Liesl Hazelton + Dorothy Gill Barnes in her studio + Lillian Elliott.

Basket by Miriam Gray

Baskets Made from Recycled aluminum cans + Arbel Egger’s baskets.

Kathamuthu makes a laundry basket out of recycled magazine pages as part of the e-homemaker project.

Doug Johnston’s Basket-weaving Method Is An Ancient Precursor To 3-D Printing via abigal doan.

Book Intertwined: Contemporary Baskets From the Sara and David Lieberman Collection.

Recycled Easter basket

Basic recyled basket structure + Planted basket ball + recycled bolga baskets + Traditional and contemporary baskets.

A Woman of Substance basket coiled from discarded silk blouses by Jackie Abrams

Basket weaving update – Carolyn’s Amazing Creation! + Candy Wrapper Magazine Page Vase + Three-dimensional Embroidery.

p.s.: Aly De Groot (NT) GHOST NET BASKETS via Mike McDowell

Posted in Crafts | Tagged , , , , , | 14 Comments

Towards self-sustainable everything

Towards krios. We are on our way to Paros so updating maybe limited

Building with Tires, Cans and Bottles:

A Michael Reynold’s design and built home

A Michael Reynold’s design and built home. The construction methods are not new; this type of construction is closely related to indigenous building methods that have been used for centuries.  However, an architect and builder in New Mexico, Michael Reynolds, is the visionary behind building with garbage.  He has been using old tires, cans and bottles for decades, to create homes that are entirely self-sustaining and off the grid.

Can a family live high in the mountains of Western Montana, build a solar-powered home that uses no outside energy sources and still have a decent quality of life? The Leonard family thinks so.

Enchanting “Eco Truly Park” is a Self-Sustaining Paradise on Earth

Engineering Your Environment: Examples of Sustainable Housing in Rural Alabama + The straw-bale home on the hill.

This building plays music when it rains!

Edible homes: the Incredible Edible House Feeds New Vision of Sustainability + Urban gardening tips.

Rooftop garden fotos + Raising the green roof + Roof of Abundance + Check Out This Manhattan Roof Garden + Athens roof garden.

Vertical gardens

[Notes on a vertical garden] + “orti urbani” + Architecture – Patrick Blanc: Botaniquement parlant + Algae Farm And Vertical Garden Proposed For Vacant Boston Landmark + Bella Roma + Mobile garden: un giardino dentro il vagone del treno.

Books: The Self-Sufficient Life and How To Live It.

Garden in a Jar

How to Grow Sprouts in a Jar.

Foraging: how to cook stinging nettles video + Foraged Nettle Gnocchi with a choice of 3 sauces + Carrot top pesto with roast vegetables and salmon part + Vegan Carrot Cake Recipe.

Mason jar garden

Vertical garden made from soda bottles + How to Start a Container Garden in any Amount of Space.

Windowfarms: Social, crowdsourced hydroponics bring fresh food home

Window Farms: An experiment in urban agriculture + Window Farms.

Kireei – Window Farms + Choose A Windowfarm Version to Build + Window Farm Update, incredible lettuce!

Edible flowers.

Other: Root Simple is about back to basics, DIY living, encompassing homegrown vegetables, chickens, herbs, hooch, bicycles, cultural alchemy, and common sense.

Salad in a jar + How to Make Salad in a Jar

How to Make Almond Milk Yogurt #542.

Can one survive by just eating air? + Breatharians believe that a person can give up food and water altogether and live purely off prana, which they also call “living on light” or “living on air”.


Solar cooking

Solar cooking: Solar drying of fruit and vegetables + How to Make a Solar Food Dehydrater From Beer Cans video + A Rocket Stove Made From a Five Gallon Metal Bucket + How to Build a Solar Pizza Oven + Build a Solar Cooker From Old CDs + Scroll down for solar cooker made from cardboard and foil + La Cucina Solare.

Balcony solar panels

Small scale home solar project + Dall’America il mini generatore eolico-solare da balcone + la foto di uno dei due pannelli che ho installato.

An electricity-free terracotta fridge.

Posted in Plants & Gardening | Tagged , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Linda Schailon and plastic straws

This past September I participated in the London Design Festival thanks to Linda Schailon of Ecopink. Ecopink organizes exhibition events with the intent to promote female creativity via art and design related to ethics and environment.

Recently Linda won “Una mimosa per l’ambiente”, a recogniton for her pro-environmental activities.

Here’s an interview between Linda and myself done after our partipation in the London Design Festival:

CK: «Tell us a little about yourself, where you come from, where you studied, etc..».
LS: «I was born in Caserta. I lived in Milan, where I specialized in Fashion Design at the Politecnico. In the past 10 years, I have accumulated various working experiences permitting me to have a global view of a project, be it fashion, art or design».

CK: «What inspired you to form Ecopink?».
LS: «I thought that providing tangible examples of how to transform “waste products” into “objects of desire” could stimulate recycling education and show how to give objects a new identity thus extending their life cycle and limiting a range of issues associated with industrial or daily waste disposal. So I went looking for artists and designers who shared my philosophy and who were working with new materials in order to offer them, and myself, an opportunity to exhibit and thus express themselves. I noticed immediately that the most advanced prospects in this field came from women. And that’s how Ecopink was born».

CK: «Do you see Ecopink as a kind mission?».
LS: «Yes, I was born in a country that has a whole series of serious problems related to waste disposal. Furthermore, growing up in a neighborhood without  trees helped me shape and define my mission, beginning with that of being an artist».

CK: «Tell us about previous Ecopink activities/exhibitions».
LS: «In 2008 I started working on my brand “Linda Schailon” and from there began to promote projects related to the basic concept of love for poetry and nature. The feedback was great, but when you work on a conceptual level these days, it is not easy to “get going”, at least initially».

CK: «What were the difficulties you had organizing an exhibition in London?».
LS: «The organization in London called for a tremendous contribution on the part of the artists, each with their own experiences, timing and manner of communication. This required a certain effort on our part and the ability to empathize with the artists».

Straw Ring, [Riciclo creativo]: Flow, l’eco-anello di Linda Schailon fatto con le cannucce delle bibite

CK: «What has changed since the first edition Ecopink in Milan and the third edition in London?».
LS: «The project has grown as “green”, “recycle” and “ethic” have become the daily bread for those who work in the field. The life blood has been enriched thanks to the synergies that we’ve been able to create in time and the  interest in design conceived by women, and, often, for women (who, when you get down to it, are the ones who keep the economy turning!) who analyze and respond to contemporary needs with acute and intelligent proposals, capable of bringing value where there is none».

CK: «How did you select the women who participated in Ecopink’s London Design Festival? What was the criteria used?».
LS: «The criteria used for this edition was different. Most importantly, we wanted to involve experienced designers with different sociocultural backgrounds, favoring artists from Campania (region in southern Italy) gifted with great talent and rare genius, but creating in an environment that, paradoxically, is not inclined to adequately support their creativity. Why only women? Because the most significant experiences in sustainability come from women».

CK: «What is itai doshin and how this concept influenced the way you work?».
LS: «A project like Ecopink would be unthinkable without a team, which is its strength and direction. There is an expression in Japanese, that as a “team leader”, I always try to remember: “Itai Doshin” which means “Different bodies, same mind.” For a team to actualize a project, it’s important that each one of us can make the most of our skills and abilities. But it’s also equally important to look in the same direction. I am very pleased with this year’s team. We are all in tune, despite the fact that, even though we all work on the same project, we’re from different parts of the world: England, Italy and Switzerland».

Linda wearing her sprinkle dress + 12 Creative and Unique Dresses

CK: «What’s the state of sustainable fashion in Italy?».
LS: «I think that in Italy we cannot yet speak of “sustainable fashion”. There are efforts, significant experiences, but there are no “numbers”. It remains within the realm of artisans, elitists, so in reality there is no significant contribution to the environmental well-being».

CK: «What is the difference between the economic situation in Italy with what you saw in London?».
LS: «From the point of view of sustainable fashion, London has made much progress and, I believe, has influenced the cosmopolitan atmosphere».

Linda Schailon e i suoi acchiappasogni

CK: «Why is so much attention given to green design today?».
LS: «When it comes to design, it’s impossible not to talk about the present global scenario, and it strikes me as blind and unproductive if a project does not take into account the need to safeguard the environment, identifying the use of natural and recycled materials, from the starting point».

CK: «Is there a link between the economic crisis and the choice of many designers to use waste as a resource?».
LS: «I really think so. Waste is free, we want to get rid of it and, simultaneously, we don’t have money: you do the math».

CK: «What is the importance of craft today?».
LS: «I personally give a lot of importance to craft, but I think it should acquire a new “value”, a new “meaning” to adapt to the dynamics of our time».

CK: «How did coming from an area (Campania), tormented by the problem of garbage, influence your  artistic choices?».
LS: «A lot. I have often stressed that what we now call ethical fashion, sustainable design, etc.., has an ancestor to be found in “l’arte di arrangiarsi” (“the art of making do” )  which has made Neapolitan genius famous throughout the world».

CK: «What advice would you give designers interested in creating an eco-related career?».
LS: «Be very vigilant. Study and experiment».

Related links: Ecopink + Linda Schailon + The Linda Schailon Flow Rings are Perfect for Quirky Fashionistas + Museo del Riciclo.

Inspired by Linda’s Flow Rings, here are some other recycled straw ideas:

Evan Blackwell’s Straw Sculptures–more Evan Blackwell art

Best ways to recycle plastic drinking straws + Suck It! 8 Brilliant Examples of Plastic Drinking Straw Art + Drink straw lamp shade + Drinking straw heart tutorial.

You can also flatten the straws and weave them into placemats that look something like this + Paper Straw Wreath + DIY Straw Wreath Tutorial + Straws, I Love to Create – Crafty Can Corral.

Fused straw hair clip + William Chambers Millinery, plastic straw hat + Make a St. Briget’s Cross from drinking straws.

Anthropologie Windows Combine: Recycled Plastic, Social Media, and Custom

A drinking straw is a short tube intended for transferring a beverage from its container to the mouth of the drinker by use of suction…

Drinking straw vase, in Italian + Borse con materiali riciclati.

Other:  how to make floor mat from trivets + Recycled Plastic Basket + Recycling Plastic Workshop in Merida Venezuela + Woven plastic bags + Are Bags-Revolt Lamps a Bright Idea? + Plastic Water Bottle Necklace with Square Pendant + Untitled picture.

Posted in People | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments