Showing posts with label Ceramic beads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ceramic beads. Show all posts

TRAINING DAY

I've been working on some new designs, and we have some new ladies working now, so Friday was training day.  The ladies are proficient at rolling and painting beads, but sometimes it's good to try something new !

I am also flying back to the U.S.A. early this year for the birth of a new grand baby, so I thought we had better get cracking on Christmas ornaments.

Here is Vicky working on star ornaments

Otillie ( in the foreground) is woking on small flowers. Any B.T.W. ever wonder where those Lyon's club glasses go? We we were happy to receive a bag of them because anyone over 40 needs them !

Wonky star pendants

Lodie is working on the star pendants

Bracelet bars


 I got busy and forgot to get a photo of everyone, but we had a productive and fun day.

ARTISAN PROFILE: LODIE IITA



Lodie ( pronounced Lloyd-a )is a 40 year old single mother of 4 children. She is the sole bread winner of the family, since all her children are still in school.

Lodie has been with us in the ceramic bead making project since September 2013. When I asked her what she did for income before working with us , she told me she collected Acacia tree pods for selling to farmers , who feed them to their goats. The trees only drop pods during part of the year, so I can not imagine how she actually survived with only collecting pods for income.

Acacia tree in Makhtesh Gadol, Negev Desert, I...
typical Acacia tree

English: Acacia confusa (leaves and seedpods)....
some typical pods ( there are many varieties)

Lodie has a seventh grade education. She said that she lived with her grandmother as a child, and when her grandmother died, there was no one to pay her school fees.

Lodie lives in a tin hut,with no running water, and she cooks over an open fire. She  collects fire wood before work, or her children collect it after school.



I asked her what her biggest worries were, and like most mom's it was about her children. While we might worry about our children's friends or bullies at school, or how they are doing in school;

She worries about providing for their food, clothes and school fees. When I asked her what her immediate needs are, she said that she really needs some blankets, because we are headed toward winter, and her oldest, took blankets when she went to live in the school hostel . This made me feel kind of bad that I had not asked her before now......of course I will go buy her a blanket.  

Our winter weather here in Namibia is a lot like winter in Florida. The days are quite warm and sunny, but nights are often in the  40's to 50's and can sometimes get down to  freezing.  When there is no heat in the house, anything below 60 is darn cold. I know, because no houses here  have central heat. At my house however, we have portable heaters, and a heavy down comforter on the bed.
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FIRING OUR CERAMIC BEADS


Whenever I read a post about someone starting the craft or business of ceramic bead making, I wonder if they know what they are getting into.  I certainly didn't ! It's been about 4 years now, and the things I have learned could fill a book. So many failures and troubles. The learning curve is steep ! Still it's those days when I open the kiln to a perfect firing , well almost perfect is more common :) Those days keep me going.

I wrote a blog for Beads of Clay  about how we manage here in Africa without all the fancy tools and specialty equipment available in the USA. andsome of the special challenges we face here. http://www.blog.beadsofclay.org/2012/06/in-africa-we-make-plan.html check it out.
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New Work


Just a few more days and we fly back to Africa, our parallel universe. Here are a couple of new designs
hatched out lately.


Bracelet crocheted with pearl cotton, beaded, and attached to braided leather  band


Embroidered cuff on wool felt

NEW POTTERY STUDIO AND YOUTH CENTER

OUR YOUTH CENTER AND POTTERY STUDIO WERE FINISHED WHILE WE WERE IN THE USA ! WHEN WE GET BACK AND MOVE IN, WE WILL HAVE A REAL STUDIO FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE WE WERE  WRONGLY EVICTED FROM THE PREVIOUS PLACE. NO MORE GARAGE, KITCHEN TABLE, AND SIDE PORCH AT MY HOUSE. A STUDIO AND  I GET MY HOUSE BACK :)

BEADS FOR SPRING

 I'm a nervous wreck about doing our first bead show. It's in Denver. April 16 and 17. 
 Of course we always want our artistic endeavors to be accepted and approved of, but more importantly, the ceramic bead part of Work Of Our Hands, has been a money pit! So many mistakes and learning curves for me, as well as the African artisans. We really NEED to reverse the money flow for this part of the project to continue.











NEW BEAD DESIGNS



BEADS, BEADS, BEADS!

FOR OVER A WEEK I HAVE BEEN SORTING,COUNTING, PACKING, STRINGING, BEADS, BEADS, BEADS! DENVER BEAD SHOW HERE WE COME !

New Tribal style beads

Had terrible troubles with glaze over the holidays, turns out it was a bad batch of brush on glaze.( Too old)  But the good side is, it forced me into experimenting to make beads with no glaze. These beads are carved by the ladies in leather hard clay, then "painted" With Terra Sigillata. for shine without glaze. I'm really happy with the results.

GOING TO BERLIN

We are honored to be chosen by Namibia's ministry of Trade and Industry , to go to the Berlin Trade Fair November 10 -14   2010. But are we ever exhausted from getting ready! Today was the deadline to have everything ready to ship, so last night was very short :) as we finished up all the pricing and packing, and Lon finished up all the forms.  Isabella, (shown above), will be the person actually going to Berlin to represent us. We've come a long way, by God's grace, from those first beading classes!


Several people have asked " what now? " Since our ceramic bead work place is gone. In Africa people always "find a way" or "make a plan" when life's road blocks come along. It's very inspiring .

So my plan is to extend the roof off the back of our home, for a shaded outdoor work space. The kiln has been moved to the the garage . ( it took 8 young and strong guys ! It weighs 600 kilos, or 1,400 lb.)