Voyager: Designer Ken Amarit creates a different kind of video game from old-school materials, like wool and clay

Voyager


by Natasha Tauber As the NASA spacecraft Voyager I pierced the outer reaches of our solar system in its 36th year of travel (and became the farthest manmade craft from Earth), New York City designer …

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The world according to Frieda

Bloesem Living | Lab71 Frieda Mellema

Always when I see her work passing by I pause and dream … 

Difficult to capture this in words … so I leave you with the visuals … perhaps you can tell us what her work does for you?  

Bloesem Living | Lab71 Frieda Mellema

Bloesem Living | Lab71 Frieda Mellema


Bloesem Living | Lab71 Frieda Mellema

Bloesem Living | Lab71 Frieda Mellema

Bloesem Living | Lab71 Frieda Mellema

Bloesem Living | Lab71 Frieda Mellema

Frieda Mellema is a well-known stylist – creator – artist from the Netherlands. Currently she is working on a book about traditional craftmenwship which will launched on 29th November during an event called Meesterlijk in Amsterdam. 

.. Lab-71
.. Lab-71 clients list

.. Previous Bloesem posts about Lab71

 

Interview: Ben Gravy of Quaffing Gravy: The founder of UK’s new craft beer talks about turning an idea into an easy-drinking pale ale

Interview: Ben Gravy of Quaffing Gravy


by Gavin Lucas With a logo drawn by a tattoo artist and screen-printed directly onto its bottles, new UK beer brand Quaffing Gravy is guaranteed to stand out in the UK’s burgeoning craft beer scene. The…

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Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt

Swedish designers Glimpt worked with Peruvian artisans to produce the hand-carved wooden bases for these coffee tables (+ slideshow).

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_1

Mattias Rask and Tor Palm of Glimpt travelled to the village of Yungay in Peru to research the techniques used by woodworkers at a workshop run by voluntary organisation, Artesanos Don Bosco.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_2

They designed a range of contemporary tables that make use of the facilities provided to artisans, who are taught furniture-making skills to encourage them to stay and work locally, rather than moving to the cities.

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The bases are made from local timber, including a hard white wood called Lengha, and a type of cedar. The wood is turned on a lathe before the faceted decoration is chiselled by hand and painted.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_4

Explaining how the project came about, Rask told Dezeen: “We sent an email to a Swedish guy in Lima and asked him about crafts organisations in Peru; he basically said that Artesanos Don Bosco are the best artisans in Peru, so we sent them an email!”

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Prehistoric Aliens will continue to be produced in Yungay and was presented by Italian furniture brand Cappellini as part of its Cappellini NEXT collection in Milan earlier this year.

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Glimpt collaborates with artisans around the world and previously created a range of stools made from seagrass in Vietnam, and ceramic lights painted to look like strawberries produced by craftsmen in South Africa.

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See all design by Glimpt »
See all furniture »

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_8

Still life photography is by Daniel Thrue.

Here’s some more information from the designers:


Glimpt of Peru – Prehistoric Aliens

We spent the autumn of 2012 in Peru working and learning from the Crafts Cooperative, Artesanos Don Bosco, a continuation of our work with craftsmen and women from different countries.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_9

Before our trip we had not fully appreciated how extensive this organisation was. Artesanos Don Bosco is part of a large Italian voluntary organisation called Operazione Mato Grosso. This organisation was founded in the 1960s by Father Hugo, a Catholic missionary priest who saw there was a need to help poor farmers in the Andes. Now, some fifty years later, Operazione Mato Grosso has roughly 2000 Italian volunteers and employs about twice as many Peruvians.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_10

The work involves educating and training people in the remote villages in the Andes, and then creating employment opportunities for them there. The idea is to encourage people to stay and work in these isolated areas rather than move to a very uncertain future in Lima, something that many Peruvians otherwise are tempted to do.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_11

Operazione Mato Grosso promotes the virtues of a simple, unhurried life, living and working in cooperation with one another. They have started schools, orphanages, hospitals and even power stations that provide electric power in the mountains. All this is free of charge for the poor.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_12

One part of this organisation, called Artesanos Don Bosco, provides craftsmanship training. After five years training with ADB most of the artisans then work in the organisation’s cooperative. The courses they give are mainly related to different ways of working with wood. This includes furniture making, decorations, carving pictures and the construction of housing. They also teach stone masonry, how to make glass, different ways of working with textiles and even metal work.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_13

We decided we wanted to help them develop a more modern series of furniture. After having visited several villages and different cooperatives in the Andes we finally settled on Yungay as the village where we would set to work. In Yungay there was a little cooperative that worked with furniture making. During our visits we were impressed by their very high standards of craftsmanship and above all by the skill of the people who carved pictures in wood.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_14

So day after day of soup followed by fried guinea-pigs and washed down with Inca Cola finally lead to the production of a series of coffee tables called Prehistoric Aliens. Our main difficulty was not a shortage of good ideas but rather the language barrier. Neither of us spoke any Spanish but we were faced with a situation where this was the only possible language for communication.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_15

The first few weeks we had been helped by our American friend Nick, but after a while we had to manage by ourselves. After keen language practice on the computer every evening, and getting a lot of hands on experience every day in the workshops, we finally managed to make some Spanish sounding words and were rewarded with the nicknames Gordo and Chato (Chubby and Shorty) by our fellow workers.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_16

Marcial, Barosso, Aristares and Messias taught us alot and we hope we have taught them something as well. It has been a good experience living and working with them. Hopefully our collaboration will provide them with more work so that they can keep on developing their skills and supporting their families, as well as contributing to the great work of Artesanos Don Bosco and Operazione Mato Grosso.

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The name, Prehistoric Aliens, was inspired by Peru’s fantastic cultural heritage which often seems very mystical and ancient to our western eyes.

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The small coffee tables are almost like small spaceships that have just landed, with their leader, The Robot.

dezeen_Prehistoric Aliens by Glimpt_20

The post Prehistoric Aliens
by Glimpt
appeared first on Dezeen.

BOFFO Fire Island Art Camp: NYC’s arts-focused nonprofit opens a summer residency and programming at the beach

BOFFO Fire Island Art Camp


By claiming public spaces for artistic enrichment, New York City’s non-profit arts organization BOFFO continues to create ambitious participatory art projects. Their mission encourages engagement with works stemming from collaborations between communities and artists, both emerging and established. And, to top if…

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How to make your own patterned plates

LAFETE

More exciting news on BloesemKids this week that I need to share with you … a new craft contributor has joined the Bloesem team. Her name is Nora Vrba and founder of party accessories shop La Fête 

Nora will be sharing tutorials on a regular basis at the B:Kids craft project page starting yesterday with a great lesson in how to create your own Patterend Plates…. 

Plates_step1
DIY_patterned-plates_cookie

 

.. Tutorial Patterend Plates

.. La Fête

“Disbelief” over plans to remove crafts from UK creative industries

Glassblowing, photo by Shutterstock

News: government proposals to remove crafts from its list of recognised creative industries have triggered “disbelief” and “frustration” in the sector.

Industry body the Crafts Council said the announcement had been met with “incomprehension” by the country’s craftspeople.

“The response has been mostly a sense of disbelief and incomprehension,” said research and policy manager Julia Bennett, pointing to the dozens of messages left on the organisation’s Facebook page today.

“There’s a lot of frustration, a sense of feeling undervalued and a fear that this will make people invisible.”

As reported yesterday, the proposed change is part of a review of the UK’s creative industries set out in a consultation paper released by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) earlier this week, which stated that craft occupations are largely “concerned with the manufacturing process, rather than the creative process.”

“I am so frustrated by this,” said crafts blogger Jen Smith of The Make Box. “The craft industry is booming right now and should be wholeheartedly supported by our government.”

Commenters on the Craft Council’s Facebook page said the decision revealed “a total lack of respect and understanding [of] the craft process” and was “obviously made by people that shuffle bits of paper around and have never created a thing in their lifetime.”

Dezeen commenters also branded the move “saddening” and “a symptom of myopic thinking.”

The decision to remove crafts from the list of creative industries seemed to be a reaction to the difficulties of gathering economic data on the sector, Bennett told Dezeen.

“The reason I think that [the government] is going down this route is that it’s challenging to come up with a methodology for measuring craft. We are working with DCMS and would welcome their investment in a methodology that would actually count craft,” she said.

In a blog post earlier this week, the Crafts Council said it was “disappointed” at the government’s proposals, adding that the methods of data collection and classification used by the DCMS did not present an accurate picture of the UK’s craft sector.

According to the council, nearly 90% of makers in the sector are the sole employee of their company, and many of them have an annual turnover of less than the VAT threshold of £79,000.

“If a sole trader falls below the VAT threshold, then because the government chooses not to gather business data below that level, they become invisible,” said Bennett, who argued that relegating crafts from creative industries would obscure the sector’s economic value and make it increasingly difficult for makers to obtain funding and support.

“We provide a lot of programmes at the Crafts Council to help people’s businesses grow. To get funding for things like that, we need to be able to say how many businesses we’re contributing to and what the scale of the sector is.

“We estimate in the UK there’s over 23,000 craft businesses with a gross value added of £220 million in 2011. It’s not as big as some other parts of the creative industries, but nevertheless it’s a substantial bit of business that’s not being made visible, not counted,” she said.

The proposed changes are intended to update the government’s 1998 Creative Industries Mapping Documents, one of the first attempts to quantify the value of creative businesses to the economy.

Consultation on the revised classifications closes on 14 June 2013. Details of how to respond can be found here.

Photograph is by Shutterstock.

The post “Disbelief” over plans to remove crafts
from UK creative industries
appeared first on Dezeen.

Stitch it Christmas Cards

Moodkids-for-bloesem-Stitch-It-christmas-cards

Let's start sending out those Christmas cards …or better start making your own and then start sending them! Our friends from the Netherlands Eefje and Maike who run the wonderful website MoodKids designed a set of stitch-it-yourself cards for Bloesem. There's 3 designs to choose from and we love them all. Pick any color thread and start stitching for a personalized mail. Gold thread would be our pick too!

Download MoodKids' template for Bloesem -Stitch it Christmas Cards here.

Enjoy! and have a merry Holiday!

 

..MoodKids
..Stitch it Christmas Cards

 

DaWanda Designmarkt Amsterdam

Dawanda

{above: journal by froschkind and necklace by gudbling}

This weekend I am trying to visit the first Dutch handmade market in Amsterdam organised by DaWanda to celebrate the opening of their Dutch website. The market is at Meininger hotel and more then 100 designers will exhibit their work in the different rooms of the hotel.  

What are your plans for the weekend? Perhaps we can meet each other on Sunday otherwise I hope to see you back next week ~ irene xoxo

Lab

Froschkind

In the images above t-shirt and teatowel by detailF, paper products by froschkind and a chrochet lamp by Made by Mo

..Dawanda

Paper Nipple Tassles

Artist Bert Gilbert’s crafty take on a titillating accessory
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London-based multidisciplinary artist Bert Gilbert marries DIY with a touch of S&M to create Paper Nipple Tassles—a crafty take on the ubiquitous burlesque accessory. Promising “more fun than you thought possible with paper,” the simple cut-outs are clearly aimed at adding amusement to all kinds of creative activities. Simply cut along the dotted line, apply some “tit tape” and you’re ready for a little lighthearted action.

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The Central St. Martins grad originally made the tassels as part of a paper party pack for London’s luxury lingerie shop Coco de Mer, which commissioned Gilbert for her unique tongue-in-cheek outlook on subversive design—a perspective that has garnered her clients spanning Marilyn Manson to Vans. Whether creating products or working in illustration or conceptual art, Gilbert successfully reinvents the traditional with a thoughtfully playful spin on modern design.

Available in five different styles, the Paper Nipple Tassles sell online and in store from London’s Luna & Curious shop, as well as from Gilbert’s own online shop Bert Industries for around £8 a set.