* little bit of kenyan dirt in there.
23 Jan 2011
new shoes
These boots started life as a tracing of my foot on a scrap piece of card. Raphael is a shoemaker working out of wooden shack in Meru, Kenya. He studied at the local polytechnic before starting his own business making safari boots and repairing shoes. Small shops and businesses, from dressmakers to carpenters, appear in clusters along the dusty roads around Meru. People sustaining themselves and their families through their own skill.
4 Jan 2011
yarn
These are from my visit to Nanyuki Spinners and Weavers in Kenya, a women's group that teaches valuable skills to women that they can use to make their own income. Starting with raw wool from the local area, the women make woven products from rugs to scarves that are sold onsite, as well as over the web and to shops in the USA. This one is me spinning wool ( I was not that great, she laughed at me)
I love the holistic approach to making here, and the fact that its done more out of necessity than to adhere to some 'crafty' aesthetic. They make yarn in a variety of colours, all of which are derived from plant or animal products. Above is Lois, with a piece of cactus covered in tiny cochineal beetles, well known for its ability to make pink cakes. They collect the beetles from the forest and, when fermented for different periods, it produces a range of purples when used to dye the yarn. Almost all the other things used to dye are grown within the compound. This means they are independent, and are not reliant on the producers of chemical dyes and the prices they set, and not working with harsh chemicals.
8 Nov 2010
house of sticks
This is a house of one of the Samburu people, built from acacia branches, cow hide, dung, string, cardboard and other found materials. They are incorporating modern materials that would otherwise be considered waste into their traditional building methods, which I find quite interesting considering the huge amounts of rubbish that are either burnt of accumulate in the streets in Kenya. I love the resourcefulness of these structures, and its something that I've seen lots of since I've been here. Re-using packaging, ingenious structures built out of unexpected materials as well as the guys who ride around on bikes with twenty plastic crates strapped onto rack with bungee, delivering groceries door to door.
Since being in Kenya I've been struck how much people here really do rely on their environment. In Meru, where we are staying, there are farms and homesteads everywhere. Allmost every person grows some kind kind of produce, whether its bananas, cabbage or tea and much of the fresh produce they eat is grown and sold locally. Water is the key for all of this, and is connected with what we are doing here, replanting areas of the Imenti forest in the hope of providing water security for the area as well as conserving indigenous species of plants and animals. Both water and resourceful, unusual and haphazard assemblies of materials will probably come to form a big part my new project.
7 Oct 2010
a trip
It must be almost nine months ago now that I sat in my parents house, faffing around on the internet on a drizzly afternoon, when I stumbled upon something that I almost didn't follow up. But I filled in the forms, sent back the application and the references (at the very last minute). I even went to an interview, but four months of job hunting had taught me not expect much from those.
So when I got a call, on a similarly dank afternoon in August, and the woman on the end of the line was telling me I'd been accepted to Platform2, that they were sending me to volunteer in a developing country for 10 weeks, I was honestly so shocked I sat down on the floor and could not speak. I don't even remember if I thanked her.
In less than one week I will be flying to Kenya to volunteer at a forest conservation project thanks to this scheme. Platform2 is run by Dfid, Christian Aid and Bunac, and gives young people like me the opportunity to visit a developing country and learn about global issues first hand. Despite all my research and reading, I still can't conjure a satisfactory image of what its going to be like, thats why I can't wait to get there, so it will finally feel real.
So when I got a call, on a similarly dank afternoon in August, and the woman on the end of the line was telling me I'd been accepted to Platform2, that they were sending me to volunteer in a developing country for 10 weeks, I was honestly so shocked I sat down on the floor and could not speak. I don't even remember if I thanked her.
In less than one week I will be flying to Kenya to volunteer at a forest conservation project thanks to this scheme. Platform2 is run by Dfid, Christian Aid and Bunac, and gives young people like me the opportunity to visit a developing country and learn about global issues first hand. Despite all my research and reading, I still can't conjure a satisfactory image of what its going to be like, thats why I can't wait to get there, so it will finally feel real.
4 Oct 2010
minimalist cake
Very beautiful images from the new IKEA cookbook that has no words in it. Probably not very useful for making a cake though.
14 Sept 2010
The End of the Road.....
Just got back from a fantastic weekend at End of the Road, the first outing for the thermochrome lanterns.
Leaning off a ladder twenty feet in the air, we raced the fading light and my spinning head from vertigo to get fifteen lanterns safely hanging in their tree. Rejecting kind offers to go up the ladder in my place, I stubbornly hung each lantern from the branches of a huge evergreen. Each night I dragged my assistant/ spokesperson (while occupied up a ladder)/ official photographer away from the music and the beer to light each one in turn. I was so pleased with how they looked I didn't get even slightly furious when one was broken.





Leaning off a ladder twenty feet in the air, we raced the fading light and my spinning head from vertigo to get fifteen lanterns safely hanging in their tree. Rejecting kind offers to go up the ladder in my place, I stubbornly hung each lantern from the branches of a huge evergreen. Each night I dragged my assistant/ spokesperson (while occupied up a ladder)/ official photographer away from the music and the beer to light each one in turn. I was so pleased with how they looked I didn't get even slightly furious when one was broken.





Thanks for everyones help and support, especially Dave, even though I would let him climb that ladder, thanks to End of the Road for having me and for lovely weekend.
4 Sept 2010
mess
9 Aug 2010
Success
One down, fourteen to go. The first lantern for End of the Road had emerged unscathed from the kiln, and now it really exists. Here he it hanging from a tree, just waiting for the other to join him. I'm afraid you will have to imagine that its pink.
26 Jul 2010
No more disasters
Lets's hope.
After an infuriating few days last week trying to fix my slip, to no avail, I've bitten the bullet and bought some. I have no idea why I didn't do that in first place. So, way behind schedule, and therefore causing me some severe anxiety, I have cast a grand total of 1 lantern. Better get on with it then
After an infuriating few days last week trying to fix my slip, to no avail, I've bitten the bullet and bought some. I have no idea why I didn't do that in first place. So, way behind schedule, and therefore causing me some severe anxiety, I have cast a grand total of 1 lantern. Better get on with it then
19 Jul 2010
Let's Do Nice Things take over SHOP
From the 26th to the 30th of July Lets Do Nice Things take over SHOP on Christmas Steps with films, art and naked people, as well as a pop up gallery on Friday, in which I shall be featuring. I'll be showing the Thermochromes, not sure exactly where and how yet...
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