Wednesday, December 3

Good Stuff: Temari













These thread balls are called Temari. China introduced them to Japan in the late 7th century. They were originally used by children of the wealthy noble class in a Japanese variation of hacky sack called, kemari. The game became increasingly popular over time and mothers and grandmothers, who could not afford to buy their children the foreign imports began to make their own. They would use remnants of old kimonos and wrap them in the salvaged thread.

As time went the balls' stitching started to become less functional and more decorative until the balls evolved into the art form they are today. Which I think is a pretty cool thing. I use to have a bunch when I lived in Asia and would string them up like they do in the small photo above and turned them into kick-ass Christmas ornaments. However, now that all seems absurd and would cost a small fortune. I tried finding them stateside and they go for around $50 a piece. Um what? I should have stocked up while I was still living far east.

All the large photos of the Temari balls are via NanaAkua.

Tuesday, December 2

Insides: Alea Joy












All photos are from Alea Joy's instagram account, which is awesome so you should go check it out here.

Saturday, November 29

Insides: Decorating with Textiles

Some more scans from the book Decorating with Textiles? Living with Textiles? or a combination of both. I'll get back to you on the actual name of the book, and update this when I find it again. I've been cleaning out my apt this week so it would take a lot of digging at this point. The book has a lot of great photos, a little outdated but I'm always looking for new ways to display what is now becoming a ridiculous collection of textiles. While cleaning this past week I noticed I have way too many long skinny panel textiles and nothing to do them with them short of carpeting my walls. Sure, there are worse problems to have, but it's stressing me out. That sounds pretty lame/is pretty lame, sort of like this paragraph. So here, photos: