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Showing posts with label composting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label composting. Show all posts

Monday, 10 March 2014








Stuff your eyes with wonder;
live as if you'd drop dead in ten seconds.
See the world.
It's more fantastic than any dream made
or paid for in factories.

Ray Bradbury

Photo by Hugo Bierschenk 

HANDMADE --Things made by hand are special.
They take longer to make, feature good materials,
represent the maker's best effort. And they are obviously
made with love. Why else would anyone bother? People
who earn a living from making beautiful things deserve
support and recognition.

Here is one of them.

THE GUITAR MAKER
or how a croc bite led to something awesome


 Pictures courtesy of crocbiteguitars.com



In the "jungles" of Frederick
County, Maryland, as he likes
to refer to his neighborhood,
Harry Harne III makes stringed
instruments.

Working with his
hands, he fashions
mandolins, banjos,
six string guitars,
ukuleles, and cigar
box guitars. (A cigar
box guitar is exactly
what it's name implies:
a stringed instrument with a body made from an empty cigar box which, as anyone who collects them will attest, are quite
lovely.)

Harry was in the fifth grade when he made his first instrument but it
wasn't until 2010 that he decided to turn his talent into a full-time
career. And the credit for that goes to a crocodilian.

 "Some years back I was bitten by two things: a love for stringed
instruments and a three foot spectacled caiman. There was some
nerve damage and I had a hard time making a tight fist for a year.
During this time I said that when I got full use back, I'do something
really awesome.

"It got better, I started building guitars. Trust me, you never forget
a CrocBite."

Choosing CrocBite as the name of his one-man operation fully
expresses his personal appreciation of the instruments he makes.

"I like the name CrocBite because my guitars are tough, they
are primitive, they are effective. Like crocodilians," he said in an
interview conducted by e-mail.

His instruments stand out for their decorative elements, the exotic
woods used, their striking looks. More recently, he began to make
instruments whose shape reflects the outline of the person who
will be playing it.

Harry's instruments are beautiful. If you go to his website, you'll
be able to admire many samples of his work that reflect craft,
versatility, wit, and a gift for using quirky, unusual elements to
create a one-of-a-kind instrument.





Take his Bocote Banjo (seen in above pictures) which recycles
a VW hubcap to great effect. It features "a solid one piece bocote
neck, a bamboo body, black water buffalo horn nut and bridge,
resonator cone, cover and tailpiece by Old Lowe, Waverly tuners,
and a VW hubcap back," as described on his website.

"I prefer to use exotic woods for my guitar necks, both for
unparalleled beauty, and durability. Another reason these woods
are ideal is for their ability to be played 'raw,' which means no hard
finish at all," he says on the website.

"Many people, myself included, think that raw necks feel better
and faster in the hands, sound amazing, and better honor the tonal
qualities of the wood. If you have never played a raw neck, I think
you'll be surprised."

The exotic woods he favors have enthralling names like Bubinga
(African rosewood), Padauk, Canary, Ipê, Cumuru, Jatobá (Brazilian
cherry), Caribbean Rosewood, Purpleheart, Ziricote, Bocote. He
describes each one in his site, specifying its qualities and the
reasons for liking it.

What does a handmade instrument
have over a factory made one?

"Handmade instruments have more
heart, and more attention is paid to
details. With each instrument being
made completely by hand, there is
variation between instruments. It
also allows for custom tweaking to
any and all steps, as desired," he wrote.

"Working with a customer to build something unique for them is
a great joy."

Though self-taught, Harry said he is not afraid to ask for help or
advice from more experienced people. The hardest part about
making an instrument is "parting ways with it, once it is complete.
And also some of the math involved in fretboards, but it's math, so
it works."

A picture on Harry's website shows him tuning one of his
cigar box creations: he wears glasses, has a beard and projects an
easy going, amiable personality. At 31, he has built a life devoted to
his passions, which include "making and admiring music, reading,
growing rare plants and orchids, brewing beer and  wine, and
listening to Guided by Voices loudly."

Making instruments is his livelihood, however.

"I don't only build commissioned pieces. I spend winters usually
 building an army of CrocBites to unleash upon the world. Spring
 and summer I build, and travel and sell them. Then as Christmas
approaches, my custom orders start flooding in and I build mostly
customs.

"Between the custom work, and building and selling in music stores,
festivals, and such, I do alright. Some months I don't sweat any
bills. Some months I might.

"But I do what I love and love what I do."

How much does it cost to commission a musical instrument?
"A simple cigar box guitar can be built for $100, or I could build
a mandolin or banjo for ten times that. Pricing is very dependent
on the wood types used, and the hardware choices," said Harry.

"I usually tell people that around $400 will land them a very sweet
CrocBite.

" I always try to give people more than what they paid for."

www.crocbiteguitars.com




                            A SIMPLE TIP 



Those large plastic contairners 
used to market produce are
highly suited for temporary
storage of scraps heading to
the compost heap.
Keep the container close
at hand in the kitchen
while chopping veggies and
then store it in the fridge
until it is completely full,
at which time you can dispose
of its content.









"Sunset in Southern Illinois someplace"
by Bill Santiago

"If you stop, you die;
if you keep going, you live."

Manoel de Oliveira



ⓒ 2014 by Lorraine Blasor, all rights reserved 








Saturday, 18 January 2014



Wherever you go, go with all your heart.

Confucius

Photography by Juliette Blasor

THE VIRTUOUS CONSUMER

HOW to be better consumers and denizens of Planet Earth in
2014? Let us count the ways:

-- Reduce, reuse, recycle. One way to recycle is to join a
barter group, or you can start one on Facebook. Visiting
the group's page will give you an idea of the kinds of
things that people need and items you might want to
keep on hand to exchange at any given moment. Like,
glass jars: people who sell home-made foods are sure to
be on the lookout for jars to package their products.

-- Buy wisely & use everything up to the last drop, even
tooth paste. You can squeeze a tube by hand or, if that
is too much trouble, try a squeezer like Squeezit, available
at Amazon in a pack of two, each in a different color.
Prices start at $2.95.

-- The flip side of squeeze is stretch as in stretch products to
get their full value. Take tomato sauce: watering it down will
not dramatically alter taste and may even enhance it as some
sauces can be too thick. A good way to get more bang for
your dollar!

-- The average person generates 4.3 pounds of waste, 1.6
more than most produced in 1960, according to Duke
University's Center for Sustainability & Commerce
(www.center.sustainability.duke.edu). Thanks to composting,
you can easily reduce waste by as much as two thirds. If
you have a patio or garden, composting is a breeze but even
people in an apartment can compost. Find out how at:
http://tlc.howstuffworks.com/home/apartment-compost-guide.htm/

-- Buy local. In Puerto Rico this means supporting the
many farmers' markets that have cropped in recent years
as well as buying locally sourced vegetables and fruits at area
supermarkets.  Puerto Rico is now producing a much more
varied basket of farmed products and it behooves us all
to support the island's agriculture.


Photography by Carl Pierre Blasor

LOOK AT EVERYTHING
AS  THOUGH YOU WERE SEEING IT
 EITHER FOR THE FIRST TIME OR
LAST TIME.


BETTY SMITH



           LET THERE BE LIGHT
Courtesy of Mozaik

San Juan -- Light refracted through transparent colored glass has
a magical sparkle, a richness that beguiles and creates a spell.
Entering MOZAIK is to be totally swept by the spell of lovely
handmade lamps imported from Turkey. Skilled artisans make
the lamps using the very craft that gives the store its name: glass
mosaics.

The lamps are made with brass and are decorated with countless
small bits of cut, colored glass to create beautiful abstract designs
that come to life once the lamp is glowing with light.




They come in different shapes and sizes.

There are tea light cups, table lamps, tier chandelier lamps, tall
lamps to place on the floor and ceiling lamps. Prices from $45
and up (one splendid chandelier is $1,200).

Lamps are useful and necessary. These, additionally, happen to be
prized pieces of craftmanship.

Mozaik also sells crafts from Puerto Rico and other countries,
including Nepal, Bolivia, Kenya. Though small, this fair trade store
is chockful of things, everything neatly displayed in a simple yet
colorful manner: beauty products, recycled bags by Sonia Iris
Giusti and Angel Luis Morales, Turkish money bags decorated with
verses from the Koran, sweets, clothing, and jewelry.

Owned by Brenda Almodovar, Mozaik has been in business
for a year. Located in San Juan's Condado tourist area, the store is
open all week-long.

MOZAIK World Village Bazaar
at Condado Village, 1214 Ashford Ave.
Hours: Tue-Sat 10 am to 10 pm;
Mon 10 am to 2:30 pm; Sun 1 pm to 10 pm

787.724.3769     www.mozaikbazaar.com

    A SIMPLE TIP:

Plastic lids, the kind commonly found on top of cans, make
useful trays for products such as oil bottles that tend to drip and
get oily on the bottom. Being plastic, these trays will last
a long time and are easily washed with soap and water when they
get too slimy.


Let's go and get drunk on light again.

It has the power to console.

Georges Seurat


Photography by Juliette Blasor


©2013 by Lorraine Blasor all rights reserved