Showing posts with label handmade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handmade. Show all posts

Working with wood; a Gypsy tradition


Photo description: Bottom: Veshtike Rom spatula, Left to Right: Bertike style spoon (oval bowl), Romanian Roma spatula, traditional Gypsy clothes peg (clothespin), Veshtike Rom stirrer, Veshtike Rom spoon (round bowl), Top: Honey/jam spreader (jam spreader does not, actually, have holes)

The Romani People (Gypsies) have had a knack of making a living from many activities in which they used the materials that were and are found in the environment around them, be this wood or others. Some of those activities today have died out, others continue, such as spoon carving and basket making.

Carving spoons, and the making of other kitchen and household items from wood, is just one of them, another is making baskets from osiers (thin branches), grasses and such.

Neither of those activities are invention of the Romani People, that is true, but the Rom carved – pardon the pun – themselves in many places a niche here and then, later, also in the recycling field well before recycling was even cool and a word.

The various different Romani groups, when it comes to carving spoons, and other kitchen utensils, developed their very own styles which, for instance, differed from the styles of the general Russian (and other) spoon carvers and also those of the Scandinavian ones.

On the other hand, however, the Romani craftsmen and even -women, created many of their own designs of spoons and kitchen utensils from wood, such as the stirring woods and spatulas, which are so very different from those that are found in Western Europe per se.

Designs and styles of the spoons vary too from group to group. The Romanian – and “Balkan” in general – spoon carvers make the bowls, while egg-shape, with the point towards the from while the Bergtike Rom in Poland have the “tip” of the egg towards the handle and the Veshtike Rom spoon has a more or less round bowl, similar to those of the Doukhobors (a Russian sect).

It was also the Gypsies, the Rom, who seem to have been the first, though whether it can be proven is another question, to have created the clothes peg, or clothespin, as our American cousins call it. When exactly the current design of the Romani clothes peg, and with that I mean the one made from a stick and banded with tin, has come about I cannot say but it will have been, I should guess, when strips of metal could be found or made.

When it comes to the Gypsy clothespins there are then also at least two design variations, at least among the Romani People in Western Europe, both Sinti relations. The Romanichals in Britain, and from Britain, use a strip of tin, which is affixed with short nails (pins) near the top end, in general, while the Manouche in France tend, at times, to use wire which is wrapped around and tightened with pliers of sorts. The latter version has a slight safety issue in that there tends to be a little bit of wire sticking out to the side.

Among the designs of wooden kitchen tools designed and made by the Rom craftspeople are many that have never been known before as such. The ever so useful stirring wood (stirring paddle, or stirdle, as I have termed it) is just one of them, as is the rather narrower trapezoid shaped spatula, narrower than the traditional Western European spatulas, both of Rom Polska origin apparently.

The Romanian Roma of the lowlands have a different spatula design, which is akin to the stirring paddle but more of a triangular shape, and the honey and jam spreaders, in both design variations, follow the stirring paddle, or the Romanian spatula design, depending on the makers, but are much smaller, obviously.

Other wooden articles were also made by Romani woodworkers and the wooden flasks that were so very common in Romania were, in general, made by very skilled Rom on a foot-powered lathe. Alas, today, there is probably not one maker left and those that are turned out today are badly made in factories.

“Wood, Leather & Recycled” produces wooden spoons and other wooden kitchen utensils, plus some other wooden and carved products, including also Gypsy clothespins.

Wood, Leather & Recycled

Green gifting

Handmade is best

by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

When it comes to gifting, whether for a birthday or for Christmas, Chanukah, etc., gifts that the giver has made him- or herself are more appreciated by the recipient than are bought goods. This is what a study seems to be suggesting and I am sure that this is the case.

The fact is that if you make something as a gift for someone most people appreciate the time and the effort and skill that has gone into making the gift and in most case such an item is treasured for ever (almost); at least by the great majority.

Homemade is also a the greenest way of giving for any occasion and it was the way of many of our parents and grandparents. Or at least of those that did not come from the high classes in society. When I was a child that also was the norm for any kind of celebrations.

Aside from the fact that money was, more often than not, in short supply and thus bought gifts were out of the question, and that was as gifts for us from parents, grandparents or other members of the family or the other way around.

I remember that we seem to appreciate such gifts probably more than if someone had gone out and bought a toy or whatever for us that would not have been much use to us anyway, at least not for long.

A handmade knife, a slingshot, or whatever else, was more appreciated by us than if someone had gone out and bought something that we might not have, as I said, been able to make much use of.

With many people this would, I am sure, still be the case today. Though, that is true, many children today are so spoiled that they think they have to have every new thing they want from the stores. The problem is that it was the parents of the children of today, and maybe already their parents, that caused this by allowing themselves and their children being brainwashed by commercials.

Aside from the fact that we are in a serious economic downturn and money is becoming tight for many homemade gifts are the future, as will be homemade in a lot of departments, if things continue the way that they go.

So, maybe, this holiday season think of making gifts for family and friends rather than going out and buying Chinese-made toys for the kids and things like socks, ties, etc., for the adults.

A homemade handmade gift also shows the recipient that the giver has thought about what the recipient might like, considering his or her hobbies, etc. and this shows that the person cares. Anyone can go to the stores and buy something, but handmade by the giver is a different kettle of fish in the appreciation department all together.

© 2012

The Littlecote Soap Co – Product Review

Review by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

A little while ago – to be honest, a couple of months back now - I received some soap samples for test and review from The Littlecote Soap Co in Buckinghamshire and I have been slowly “munching” my way through one of the bars, the “Tea Time” one.

The “Tea Time” soap is described as a mild soap and shampoo bar and contains organic tea tree oil and lemongrass.

I have a problem, generally, with soaps per se, as I seem to have rather sensitive skin, especially at the forehead and the hands. Store bought “ordinary” soaps just dry my skin out in such a way that it is nigh on flaking at the forehead and the hands get rather raw. No such problems, really, with this soap and, I have been told this many times by soap makers, it would not be a problem with handmade soaps. I was always a little skeptical here, I must admit.

Though the nice lady from The Littlecote Soap Co nearly flipped when I told her what I normally used to wash my hair with and what I also used as “shower gel”, namely “Fairy Liquid”, I must say that the said liquid never gave me any problems either. That is why I used it.

It is the same when doing the dishes, I must say. I used to use Ecover but, after having had the information as to the high levels of 1,4 dioxane that were found in samples of Ecover in the USA, I reverted back to using said dish-washing liquid and my hands are much better again. Ecover is very harsh to my hands, at least.

Back to the soap in question though, the “Tea Time” soap and shampoo bar. Having now used it regularly I found it working extremely well, even in cold water, as that is what I mostly shower with, and it is lasting a nice long time. In this period any “ordinary” soap (the stuff you'd buy for a couple of bucks in a store) would have gone all yucky and been no longer of any use this bar is going strong still. That is why I have had no time to test the other samples as yet.

As with all real soaps, do take care not to get the suds into the eyes – they will sting – and therefore when used on little ones, one must be especially careful if one wants to avoid tears. Having said that, I have got it into my eyes before and have not had much of a problem with it.

Can I recommend soaps from The Littlecote Soap Co? Well, I though I just did. This is to say, yes... a definite yes.

For the complete range of natural handmade soaps – handmade in the English countryside – and bath salts and other products, check out their website:

www.littlecotesoap.co.uk

© M Smith (Veshengro), June 2008