Em Nova Iorque encontrámos esta livraria que nos fascinou!
Saturday, November 29, 2008
Livraria Kinokuniya
Em Nova Iorque encontrámos esta livraria que nos fascinou!
Friday, November 28, 2008
Lion Embraces Friend
Mas este tocou-me particularmente! E por isso resolvi partilhá-lo!
Espero que gostem
Monday, November 24, 2008
O primeiro "quilt"

O tecido dos macaquinhos foi comprado aqui. É um Charm Pack - Monkey ´n Round.
Apesar de não ter ficado mesmo perfeita, eu gostei do resultado final e vou querer repetir a experiência. Pode ser que na próxima vez consiga fazer um mais apurado.Sunday, November 23, 2008
Por explorar...

Ainda não tive muito tempo para poder explorar esta revista e decidir quais são os projectos que vou testar ou adaptar. Mas do que já pude ver, tem algumas ideias muito giras e eu vou querer fazer o máximo possível.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Viajante II
Monday, November 17, 2008
Viajante
Wednesday, November 12, 2008
The Essential Art of African Textiles: Design Without End

Vi esta exposição durante a minha visita ao Metropolitan. E adorei!!!
Dazzling textile traditions figured importantly in the earliest recorded accounts of visitors to sub-Saharan Africa, dating to as early as the ninth century.
Historically, textiles also constituted one of the primary commodities imported into sub-Saharan Africa, through trade routes that extended south across the Sahara from North Africa until the fifteenth century and subsequently by Europeans along the Gold Coast. Among the earliest documented examples of West African textile traditions were those collected by European textile manufacturers seeking new markets for their own exports in the nineteenth century. A significant collection given to The British Museum in 1934 consisted of the African textiles gathered in West Africa before 1913 by Charles Beving, who was a partner of a Manchester firm. More than a dozen of these works, which were gathered as part of market research to determine regional tastes, figure centrally in this exhibition.
The myriad distinctive regional traditions represented in this exhibition include the expansive monumental wool and cotton strip-woven architectural elements created in Mali and Niger; a rich range of deep blue indigo, resist-dyed textile genres produced in Senegal, Gambia, Ghana, Nigeria, and Cameroon; textile panels composed and woven by Igbo women and Yoruba men in Nigeria, to be wrapped around the body as apparel; and a series of the impressive voluminous robes and tunics that have been designed from regional fabrics from Algeria to Nigeria.


