Showing posts with label textiles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label textiles. Show all posts

Saturday, October 26, 2024

What's going on

Colorful scene from Ivan’s wedding 

 MORE TO COME

These days, we've stayed in touch regularly with our family in Peru. Hooray for the internet!

Their economy has not really recovered from the political upheavals in Peru that followed economic disaster of the pand*mic (I don't know if these things are searched and bothered, hence the *asterisk). Tourism is currently very low in this place that has invested a lot of the community's energy into developing that tourist industry. Therefore, Sam and I have continued sending money (sometimes with help from other godparents) to help out over a dozen families, at least enough to avert hunger keep many/most of them on Taquile island. Living in the big city for awhile to earn money is not a bad thing, but is not for everyone. We are so blessed for the integrity and willingness of our son-by-ceremony who acts in our name when we are not there. 

Next post will have stories: Ivan, our oldest grandson's matrimonial ceremony--and Fredy's! Kids growing up! Dancing videos from holidays. These will be news and pictures sent to us by Silvano, Olivia, Delfin, Asunta. So please consider following this otherwise rather neglected blog.


Right now our textile sales page is seeing an uptick in sales activity. We brought suitcases full of beautiful textiles when we returned last January, and it appears we will not be joining holiday fairs this year (?). So check out our Etsy site to see what is most available: https://www.etsy.com/shop/TaquileFriends

Pictures coming!





Thursday, February 4, 2021

Textiles sales online

NEW ETSY site for Taquile Textiles

With art fairs restricted this year, we have opened an Etsy site to sell the textiles. 
Check it out at: Taquile Friends
I am telling the story of our project of Solar on Taquile, and our 35+ year relationship as well as offering the high quality textiles. So far most buyers have been positive and given us good reviews.

We have some stunningly beautiful hand woven scarves:


Also quite a few of different styles of winter hats: round topped beanies, pointy topped earflap hats and many more.






We have a beautiful selection of cell phone cases and chuspa medicine bags.



We have already sold out of full fingered gloves and just have a few open-fingered gloves yet.

Do check out our shop! If you scroll down past the listings, you will see more of our story.

Saturday, January 26, 2019

Textiles in Progress

Special Textile Creation for Carnaval

Everyone is working hard to create new work for Carnavales, or Mardi Gras, a week-long celebration, dancing from house to house in colorful clothing, this year to happen in March.

This video shows the detail of extremely fine work. Rosa is making a new estallia, the sacred cloth used in the coca leaf ceremony. Rosa and her husband, Jesus, are authorities from the central suyo of Taquile this year, and are parents of the serious boyfriend of one of our beloved girls, Kusi. Rosa will use this to share coca leaves to the group during Carnaval.

Alicia is helping Celbia warp a loom for a new manta for Carnaval. She hasn't joined the dancing in the last few years, but with Silvano as Authority, she wants to support him and join the festivities. The women send a ball of yarn back and forth, wrapping around the dowelling as needed. We joke that they are playing with pelotas, toy balls playing catch.

warping the loom, coca leaves handy
Notice the white section of the warp, below. This is double warped, and longer threads, for the detailed patterns to come.
Warping the loom advances,

Ruperta is weaving a new manta for Ivan. He needs to be very presentable as the oldest son of the Authority, his father, Silvano.
Ruperta is progressing on her weaving.

Ruperta picks out the detailed pattern.
 Kusi is weaving chuspas, coca purses. The men will wear as many as 12 or 15 highly fringed coca purses during Carnaval.

 Ivan and Clever are both knitting complex men's hats for Carnaval. The knitting needles are filed from bicycle spokes--that fine!--and very tightly knit. These hats are seldom sold to tourists, too much work!
The beginnings of a man's pintay chullo

With Silvano as Authoridad, the Huarayo, or head guy of his suyo of Huallyano, this year, he will lead a Carnaval group for the full 7 days March 4 through 10. As we talk to people on the island, we invite them to dance with us. The following picture shows him and Ruperta on their way to the Sunday  council meetings:
Silvano and Ruperta in full regalia

Silvano with another authority









Thursday, November 1, 2018

Holiday Fairs 2018

HOLY FAMILY SCHOOL 
CHRISTMAS CRAFT FAIR
November 3, one day, from 8am to 3pm
We will focus on textiles, with a small sampling of our pottery.
Location is 786 26 1/2 Road, Grand Junction
Our booth will be outside between the Gym and the Middle School Building. We like the outside space if it's not raining. It's a good place to try on an alpaca hat!
Gloves: warm, soft, and alpaca!

Book bags, phone bags, dancing purse

Alpaca hats, warm and cozy

Finely woven and knitted scarves

Paonia Holiday Art Fair
Just a heads up: November 30 and December 1 at the Blue Sage Center. We will have more pottery at this show than in Grand Junction.


Saturday, February 10, 2018

Weaving for Carnaval

Active weaving for Carnaval
As we walk around Taquile Island these weeks, we hear the click-click-click of a highly polished llama bone against wood.
Women are working hard to create mantas and chuspas (coca purses) in time for next week's Carnaval Celebration.  The bone pounds in the threads of these very fine and tightly woven textiles.
Each thread of the double warp pattern is picked out by hand. Then pounded tightly into place with the llama bone. When Celbia was in the United States in 1988, teaching weaving workshops, one of her students wanted to buy her llama bone and she didn't want to sell it. Finally, when offered a substantial sum, she agreed. It is a very important tool.
Ruperta has a long way to go to finish these coca purses.
Kusi is almost finished.


It's pleasant to weave outdoors under a soft shade
Celbia' house has an easily installed shade cloth over a comfortable grassy area. Kusi, Celbia and Alicia get together to weave and chat.

Even more pleasant to weave together with friends.
Our youg girl friends are making themselves new chucos, the traditional head coverings, carefully pulling threads to create a multicolored border. We interrupt them to play volleyball, but they get right back to work after the break.

Below, Eufrasia finishes a detailed tisno, using her body as her loom. Attached to her waist and her toe, this portable loom is the first lesson of a young girl. Tisnos are traditionally used as straps for coca purses or to tie the chumpi (cummerbund), and now as wrist-ties for tourist souveniers. Sam and I have repurposed them as eyeglasses leashes.


Thursday, January 25, 2018

2018 First week

Arrival on Taquile
We arrived in Puno on Thursday, January 11, after over 24 hours of travel, we met at the Juliaca Airport by Silvano (our son by virtue of being his padrinos de matrimonio) and Fredy, beloved young man we've known since baabyhood. A happy, happy reunion. Friday was a day of shopping for supplies and then immediately on Saturday to Taquile, where the rest of the family helped us carry all the bags and bundles up to the house where our old room and lunch were waiting.

After lunch, a volleyball game broke out. One wonderful thing that happens while we are here is that extended family and friends get together in ways they never do in ordinary daily life. Rains have been regular and everything is green and beautiful.


We slipped away from the games to visit our goddaughter, Natalia, who has recently given birth to a baby boy, Roland Bradley, here wrapped in a crocheted blanked made by my mother, Irene Miller:

Taquile citizens have learned that we bring solar gear for sale or trade, this year our goodies include charge controllers and inverters, efficient LED lights, USB ports and battery voltmeters, as well as rechargeagle headlamps and flashlights. Within a couple of days we have traded or sold a large percentage of what we brought.
controller, inverter and lights traded at Rosa's family
The winter season, is the time to preserve their staple, potatoes.  The technique is to freeze the potatoes at night and then, after they thaw in the day, step on them to break the membranes so the water can evaporate and dry. Thus they can be stored for years. Since global warming, they can no longer do this job on the island and the family has to take their potatoes to a higher altitude place on the mainland to make chuƱo, or freeze-dried potatoes. To help make this more comfortable, we brought a tent!

The various families will share the tent, and, ¡wow! were they happy!

We also brought gifts of objects and money donated by the many godparents and friends of Taquile who help us make a difference here. !THANK YOU!

It wasn´t all trades and gifts, though, Clever turned Edith's plate of egg and potatoes with tomato into a bearded face!
 And some baby chicks were hatched at Celbia's house. Lizbeth loves their soft fuzzy life:

The school system suffered a teacher's strike last year, so the school year went late. This is the first time we have been privileged to witness the closure of the school year, something like graduation in the US, with honors presented to special students. Our grandson, Ivan was president of the school last year and this photo shows him passing his regalia of office to next year's president, a girl for the first time in history. About time, I say, but Ivan says the boys aren't so sure.

Back at home, Clever and Ivan are in a fierce competition, a chess tournament:
They take time to teach young Charles how to play the game.
Everywhere we go, women are weaving, getting ready for Carnaval:
Kusi has almost completed this chuspa, or coca purse

Alicia, Celbia and Kusi get social with their weaving
And, of course, we meet up with our little kid buddies and play games.

Tuesday, October 31, 2017

Holiday Shows 2017

Please join us at our holiday art shows, selling textiles that we fairly traded for solar gear with our family and community of Taquile Island, Lake Titicaca. Also a selection of pottery.
  Our home show in December:
Paonia Holiday Art Fair
Friday, December 1, 3-8pm
Saturday, December 2, 9am -5pm
Blue Sage Center for the Arts
228 Grand Avenue - Paonia, Colorado
We'll be showing TEXTILES plus our own Handmade Pottery



Did I tell you that the Taquile Island community has been deemed a 
UNESCO Cultural Heritage Site? 
~ ~ ~
November 4, 8am and 3pm
Holy Family School
786 26 1/2 Rd, 
just north of interstate 70 in Grand Junction, CO

Our booth will be located between the two buildings, outside. Weather promises to be partly cloudy and cold -- just the right weather to try on the exquisite knitted wool hats! 
We will bring a small sampling of our pottery to this show.



Sam all dressed up at the Holy Family School Holiday Show

~ ~ ~
  Our home show in December:




Thursday, November 3, 2016

Holiday Shows 2016

Please join us at our holiday art shows, selling textiles that we fairly traded for solar gear with our family and community of Taquile Island, Lake Titicaca. 

  Our home show in December:
Paonia Holiday Art Fair
Friday, December 2, 3-8pm
Saturday, December 3, 9am -5pm
Blue Sage Center for the Arts
228 Grand Avenue - Paonia, Colorado
We'll be showing TEXTILES plus our own Handmade Pottery



Did I tell you that the Taquile Island community has been deemed a 
UNESCO Cultural Heritage Site? 


~ ~ ~
November 5, 8am and 3pm
Holy Family School
786 26 1/2 Rd, 
just north of interstate 70 in Grand Junction, CO

Our booth will be located between the two buildings, outside. Weather promises to be partly cloudy and cold -- just the right weather to try on the exquisite knitted wool hats! 
We will bring a small sampling of our pottery to this show.


Sam all dressed up at the Holy Family School Holiday Show

~ ~ ~

Friday, March 11, 2016

Real Life

Back on Taquile Island
The vacation was wonderful, yet back to real life on Taquile is the best.

We are still trading solar equipment for the excellent quality TaquileƱo textiles. Sometimes this gives us an opportunity to make friends with another lovely child.

Estefani (age 2 1/2) with Sam
School will start soon, so the kids head up a volley-ball game almost every afternoon.
Eufrasia goes for the ball, skirts and all.
Our big project was to install enough solar power to run a refrigerator in the store that Delfin and Eufrasia have, just across the path from the high school and near the elementary school. The taller panel is an excellent 80W, a couple of years old. The other two are 85W each, brand new. Probably the total will be 240W. He has been selling icecream from an ice chest. Now a cloudy day of less demand will not destroy the profits. Other options are grand. I believe that besides the Medical Center, this is the only refrigeration on the Island.

We visit the Plaza and hike to the highest point on Taquile, the ceremonial site of Mulcina, almost every day.


Visits to family members and friends are a special kind of hike. Mercedez is 96 years old and has lived her live in this high altitude sun. She still walks and works a bit in her field and sometimes weaves.
Grandma Mercedez with Silvano