Dead Sea Dress

What happens when an artist leaves a dress under the Dead Sea for 2 years? Read on! Original article found here.


Artist Leaves Dress In The Dead Sea For 2 Years And It Turns Into Glittering Salt Crystal Masterpiece

For her latest project, Israeli artist Sigalit Landau decided to submerge a black gown in the Dead Sea. The gown entered the salt-rich waters in 2014 and was recently removed for display, and as you can see from these stunning pictures, the end result is nothing short of magical.

The project is an eight-part photo series called Salt Bride and was inspired by S. Ansky’s 1916 play titled Dybbuk. The play is about a young Hasidic woman who becomes possessed by the spirit of her dead lover, and Landau’s salt-encrusted gown is a replica of the one worn in the dramatic production of the 1920s.

Landau checked on the black gown various times during three-month intervals in order to capture the gradual process of salt crystalisation that you can see in the pictures below. You can also see them at London’s Marlborough Contemporary, where they’ll be on display until September 3rd.

Go World

A day like today only comes around once every two years. It's a day we set aside the political unrest, the heartache a dose of the nightly news brings, the difficult things going on in our lives. We make the popcorn, grab the knitting, camp out in front of the TV and cheer as the world's greatest athletes take center stage. OlympicHatLR_medium2

The Olympics bring with them a wonderful sense of hope. Watching athletes from all walks of life, from every corner of the earth and every possible background reminds us that borders exist only on maps. We cheer for countries that our relatives came from, because after all, in America we are all immigrants. We rally behind the tiny nations where the number of athletes can be counted on one hand. We holler playfully at our competition and we chant and wave our flags as Team USA parades out.

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I love the Olympics. The games are great and it's always wonderful to see the American flag hoisted up and our anthem blasted over the speakers, but what gets me is the dedication, the training these incredible people put their bodies through, the families of the athletes in the stands who have been there each step of the way, the sense of pride and the feeling that for a couple of weeks, we are all one. It doesn't matter who comes from where, who places first, second, or third. We are all citizens of this planet and we cheer each other on.

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Started in 2006 by Stephanie Pearl-McPhee aka The Yarn Harlot (for the "rules" click here), we knitters embrace our own version of the Olympics. Formally called the "Knitting Olympics" before the brass at the Olympic committee freaked out and made us change it to the "Ravellenic Games," we commit to earning medals for ourselves. The rules are simple and I challenge you here and now to participate. Cast on a project once the Olympic cauldron is lit and finish it when the flame is extinguished by the end of the games a little over 2 weeks later. You should be knitting something you can finish in that time period, but it should also be something that you think is a bit above your skill level. No garter scarves here - get your lace shawl, your Fair Isle mitts, your cabled sweater or whatever you've been dreaming of casted on!

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There are so many Olympic Games-inspired projects on Ravelry, but take a gander at your queue and make a quick trip out to your LYS before the Opening Ceremonies tonight. I'll be casting on for my mom's Christmas present (can't reveal any more than that since my mom reads my blog - Hi Mom!) and if there's time, a Fair Isle cowl I've been drooling over.

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Print that pattern out, wind that yarn, pop that popcorn and settle in. Go world!

 

Busy Summer

Ahoy! I've been buried in work for my upcoming Craftsy class! I am thrilled to be flying out next week to film a knitting class that will be available online soon. The prep work is intense and I hope you'll love it and learn a lot. I continue to cross things off my Teaching Bucket List and I'm honored to get to work with such a fantastic company that provides an exceptional educational platform for crafters worldwide. In the meantime, I keep stumbling across interesting articles that I want to share with you, so sit back and enjoy! We saw a lot of old yarn and ropes from Viking ships during our recent trip to Scandinavia so I found this discovery fascinating. Original article found here.

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Found: A 3,000-Year-Old Ball of Yarn

By Sarah Laskow

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The ball of yarn above is 3,000 years old. For much of its existence, it has been buried underground, in boggy land, along with the rest of the remains of three small houses built millennia ago, near what's now Cambridge, England.

Ever since archaeologists discovered Must Farm, which has been called Britain's Pompeii, they have been uncovering small clues as to what life was like for the families that lived here. This ball of yarn is one of the most delicate finds--extraordinary in its survival over all these years.

In the week since the yarn was first found, the team has carefully cleaned it up. "Excavating and cleaning artifact this fragile is not easy but seeing them up close like this really shows how remarkable these finds are," the team wrote on their Facebook page.

It's easy to imagine how one wrong touch could cause the small ball, just over 1 cm in size, to break apart into nothing.

 

Faroe Islands Fit Cameras to Sheep to Create Google Street View

My husband sent me an email yesterday with the following article attached. It is the best thing I read all day and it had to be shared! If you subscribe to my blog via email, the Youtube video links may not show up. Click anywhere on the post to see them. Original article here.
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Faroe Islands fit cameras to sheep to create Google Street View

Tired of waiting for Google to map the archipelago, Faroe Islanders have launched Sheep View 360, enlisting their ovine population to do the leg work

Follow me … mounted with a 360-degree camera. Photograph: Visit Faroe Islands

Living across 18 tiny sub-polar islands in the north Atlantic, Faroe islanders are used to working in difficult conditions. So tired of waiting for Google Street View to come and map the roads, causeways and bridges of the archipelago, a team has set up its own mapping project – Sheep View 360.

With the help of a local shepherd and a specially built harness built by a fellow islander, Durita Dahl Andreassen of Visit Faroe Islands has fitted five of the island’s sheep with a 360-degree camera.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ywdqiyoQNgQ?wmode=opaque&feature=oembed]

As the sheep walk and graze around the island, the pictures are sent back to Andreassen with GPS co-ordinates, which she then uploads to Google Street View.

“Here in the Faroe Islands we have to do things our way,” says Andreassen. “Knowing that we are so small and Google is so big, we felt this was the thing to do.”

So far the Sheep View team have taken panoramic images of five locations on the island. They have also produced 360 video so you can explore the island as if you are, quite literally, a sheep.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P2lclIm_gtA?wmode=opaque&feature=oembed]

The islands have a population of 80,000 sheep and 49,188 humans.

As well as obviously helping promote the island to visitors, the project is part of a campaign to convince Google to come to the island to complete the mapping project. Visit Faroe Islands have launched a petition and the hashtag #wewantgooglestreetview to promote its case.

But would Google Street View ruin the beauty that comes from being such an isolated place? “I think that we’re ready for this,” says Andreassen. “It’s a place that has always been so hidden and far away from everything, but I think that we are ready to invite people to the place.”

Guardian Travel contacted Google to ask if they had any plans to map the Faroe Islands. They would not comment, but pointed out that anyone is welcome to create their own Street View experiences and apply to borrow Google’s camera equipment.

It’s not the first time a project has brought together Google Street View and sheep. Last year the Google Sheep View blog was launched, which collected images of sheep found on Street View to celebrate the year of the sheep.