March 25, 2011

Auroville Press, Pondicherry

Today's post, i feel speaks for itself for the most part - no elaborate stories, no process descriptions - just the beauty of nature inspired paper products! 
At Auroville Press, Pondicherry, in depth research and years of experimentation has resulted into an amazing collection of bright colorful and fun range of paper products. Their aspiration is to manifest beauty and bring it into many aspects of their daily life. Auroville press works in tandem with local villagers for its various units including a printing and bindery unit that undertakes local, national and international projects. Details of their range of services can be found here


As for today's feature, the hand made paper products include journals, photo albums, table mats, gift tags, invites, gift wraps, photo frames, jewelry etc. All these products are made using vegetal fibres, free from toxic substances and its manufacturing does not require felling of trees! 


Here's a glimpse at some of their product range - explore more here. Enjoy! :)







"Nature contributes lavishly to the making of our products: entire gardens and forests flowers, petals, leaves, grass, pods, etc. combine to adorn and put their living forms and spirit onto the paper, making each item a unique and beautiful creation." Truly, isn't it?

March 21, 2011

Artist Feature : Anand Prakash

To begin this week i really need to hear : "What the mind can conceive and believe... it can achieve."
This is what today's artist Anand Prakash believes in.
People who can combine their passions with their daily work are the fortunate ones. Anand is one such fortunate fellow. He creates visually appealing merchandise that is handcrafted from environmentally responsible and sustainable materials. He primarily works with 100% recycled and wood-free handmade paper and this has been his medium by choice since the year 2000.
Anand’z Creation, his entrepreneurial venture as a college student is now Brand “Anand Prakash” an award-winning  designer, creating pieces of art for a global audience.With his wide range of products from bookmarks to pencils to coasters to jewelery, its practically impossible to show you all of them here. But here's presenting a few hot ideas from Anand Prakash. 
Over to him.
Spice
Spice range of stationery, recipe books, invitation cards, etc are quintessentially very me. I am a rebel and I love to create the unusual. The mediums I use are varied but simple. The Spice range was designed keeping the food connoisseur in mind as it brings a certain level of ingenuity to the otherwise mundane recipe books and invitations. It simply spices it up.
Bay leaf and cinnamon invite
Spice Paper
Paper with real spices entwined in its fiber, this is a combination of 100% recycled cotton rags with spices and is wood free. Below are a few of the papers, namely, bay-leaf, cardamom, cinnamon and cumin.
Bay leaf paper
Cinnamon paper
 Luxe
“Luxe” is a limited edition of chic and trendy range of stationery, books, invitations and business cards. Each piece is handcrafted from recycled brass metal and is avant garde in its look and feel.


India's very own : rickshaw
feels like a gold leaf bookmark
i believe we have radha-krishna here
To receive a complete product catalog, write to Anand at anandzcreation@gmail.com with the following information : Name, company, address, email and purpose for request of catalog. Also to check out more go to http://anandprakash.com/

Have a fun filled week ahead!!

March 14, 2011

Shinji Nasai : BELIEVE in HOPE


Our fellow readers in Japan, 
Thinking of you and hoping for a safe tomorrow for you and your loved ones.

The symbol reads ‘shinjiru’ in Japanese. It means believe. It’s so common to have a tattoo in kanji written 'courage' but It’s not so common with the word 'believe'.


Believe that there will be better times. Believe that some things will work themselves out soon. And believe that love is on the way. Just BELIEVE IN HOPE.

March 9, 2011

Illustrations galore!

Personally i have never actually understood what illustration is all about.But when Design Work Life featured Fmio Watanabe’s work today I was just in AWE!

Fmio Watanabe is a member of the Tokyo Illustrators Society.TIS has an interesting array of artist works.Although i did not understand the language of Fmio;s site...but as they say....the illustrations will talk for themselves now!so sit back and enjoy!







You will find more of his work here  as well as his website. Look at the illustrations for a soothing week ahead.

March 7, 2011

December Design Studio

I am delighted to present to ya'll today, the duo of Abhilasha and Siddharth at the December Design Studio. They design products which are very vibrant and fresh; 100% India inspired! 
Let me begin from the start. What happened was, i came across their blog on which, a few days back the first and last post was dated back in July of 2010, almost eight months ago – now this instigated me to write to them right away. Their work is so darn good, i was hoping to be ensured that they are still around doing great work but just too busy to devote any time to blogging. This to my relief was actually it :)

Abhilasha and Siddharth are friends back from the same batch at NID who decided to work together merely out of their love for movies, says Abhilasha jokingly :) Their company is engaged in a wide variety of creative works, besides their beautiful paper products. Graphics, ambience design, brand development/identity, films, product design are just to name a few. It's hard to believe they don't run out of oxygen, especially when it’s just the two of them running the entire show. The truth - this very variety is what keeps them fully charged and in love with every project they undertake. The best part is, until now, they haven't made much efforts, rather, have never found the need to commercialize their products or company. Luckily the word of mouth they say has been quite sufficient to keep them busy and bring them the variety and kind of work they always want - which speaks bounds in itself.

They sound fun, arty, humble and very approachable. Here’s sharing with you some of their work and a casual rendezvous that was a result of my curiosity :)

a brief bio : Academics? Where are you based out of?  How all of it came about? 
Both Siddharth and I are NID post-graduates. I've done Textile Design and Siddharth's a Graphic Designer (with an architecture background). We are based out of Delhi.
Well, how it came to be... out of boredom I think essentially! :) We are both major movie buffs and decided that we weren't getting to watch as many as we would like so we had to do something! Seriously, we were both in jobs that were becoming more and more administrative so we decided that if we wanted to stay on the creative side of things, we needed to start something ourselves. The two of us enjoy playing with different materials and techniques so being in a 9 to 5 job just wasn't doing it for us. And of course being on our own gives the freedom to select what projects we want to do and explore new areas of interest. We love to mix media and work on projects that sometimes have nothing to do with our professional training like he would become involved in textile art or I would start working as a translator on a regional language documentary or the two of us making history exercise books for class 8th social studies!  

How big or small is your setup? Is there a team that works with you or you two run the entire show? 
As of now we are keeping our setup very small, a home-based business. It is more flexible and suits our purpose for now :) but there are plans to get more formal soon.
Although we do outsource a lot of actual production works to local artisans and vendors. We have a network of vendors that we have developed over the past couple of years and they understand the kind of work we do and are enthusiastic and willing to experiment. 

What kind of projects/work are you engaged in currently and overall?
We do all kinds of design projects: interiors, book design, illustrations for children's books, calendar design, corporate identities, websites, event identities, photo shoot styling and a lot of event decor. Apart from this of course we have our product line of stationery and home textiles. Right now? ... Working on a rural tourism website, decor for a few events, a comic-book/graphic story, and in the pipeline: production design for a short film, developing prints for a kid's wear line, working on some textile art and of course developing more products for our own product line. 
[Phew! See what I meant when i said can't imagine how they manage - just the two of em and all of this work? Aren't they super efficient?]


Could you share a little more about scenography and graphics that you mentioned in the email.
Since Siddharth is an architect and has a background in event decor, we do a lot of decor for events and also trade fairs. What we specialize in is ambience design. Siddharth and I are in a unique position to provide design solutions that are more wholistic, since he is an architect/graphic designer and I am a textile designer. Between us we can envision spaces that make the best use of structure, fabric, light and decor. We not only design the space but also develop tailor-made accessories for certain events especially with materials that local artisans don't normally use in events, like paper.
As far as graphics goes, we do corporate identities, websites and print media. We've also worked on wall murals and illustrations for books.

Where can your products be bought from?
We are currently not stocking anywhere, we attend exhibtions (like local christmas markets, diwali sales etc) and sell directly. But we are putting "meeting with local stores about stocking our products" on our to-do list soon. 

Have you integrated eco-friendliness in any way as yet? And maybe considered involving rural groups for production purposes to in turn help them grow financially?
While the two of us wanted to make our products completely eco-friendly it has been very difficult to integrate it into our products in the first round of production (mainly because of the cost of raw materials).
We did manage to use recycled paper in the notebooks. Similarly we tried to contact several local NGOs that work on paper products to become involved in the production but the sheer apathy and lack of energy makes it difficult to plan production with them especially if one has a lot on the plate already. But we are very hopeful that over the next few years we can go completely green. It just needs a lot more time, patience and a little more money! :)

And how is India ever complete without it's famous Rickshaws - ah! i so miss them! 
A chauffeur driven ride that's not expensive and available right outside your doorstep. 
I must say, US has quite not progressed when it comes to public transport since probably the 1800's :( 
It's sad!
Just like India's beautiful multicolored culture, we find their work vibrant, fun and wonderfully detailed. Don't ya'll agree?
We wish December Design Studio all the best for all future endeavors and hope to see much more in years to come!

March 4, 2011

Love for Terracota : Ochre Crafts

Its friday and to wrap up, we have a visual treat for you from Ochre crafts. Ochre’s vision is to use local craft skills and materials to redesign functional ceramic products that have a wider market. The raw materials used are ceramic clay and glazes (lead free). Nature and Earth are imbibed into all handmade crafts in India including these beautiful clay artifacts. Ochre is a model for sustainable business and employment using natural materials and methods, ours is a call to a green way of living.
Just take a look at the animal kingdom they have created. You will fall in love with it as i did!
the giraffe standing tall
Glazed fish-wall art
Turtle pen stands
I found these the cutest!!!
Ahh! poor donkey... pen stand
Birdies
and the entire animal kingdom shows up
 
You have got to check them out on facebook
All images courtesy : Ochre


Special thanks to Swati!










March 3, 2011

Kennedy Center Exhibit : Maximum India

For all you guys based in and around DC - The Kennedy Center presents an unprecedented celebration of Indian arts and culture March 1-20 featuring music, dance, theater, film, literature, exhibitions, cuisine, and more. Here's just a glimpse of one of the exhibits.
Exhibition : To Stir the Still Air – Pankha from the Collection of Jatin Das
Eminent contemporary artist Jatin Das has spent much of his time over the past several decades travelling and collecting traditional hand fans from all over the Indian subcontinent. He brings approximately 40 fans from his remarkable collection.


There are traditional antique hand fans, fixed and revolving, made of palm leaves, cane, silver, feathers, silk, satin, leather, beads and bark. You'll find colonial hand-pulled ceiling fans, and replicas of those that caught Das's attention in palaces and churches the world over. Ritual temple fans of silver and brass, khus fans from Rajasthan and Kerala, the ancient phad collection from Kerala, khajur fans dressed in silk, satin and zardozi, wedding fans from Hyderabad and Pakistan, the tribal fan dhakua and the intricately woven majuli bisoni from Assam, beadwork fans from Gujarat all stand cheek and jowl with fans from the UK, Africa, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, China, Japan, Thailand, Burma and Cambodia. 'Cardboard-on-stick' fans painted on both sides by eminent contemporary artists take a bow. And there's a nod to innovation with ikat fans from Orissa, split bamboo on wrapping paper, and crochet, appliqué and embroidered fans. He has over 5000 fans collected over 20 years.
Let us know if you collect something, we would love to see the collection! 
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...