Friday, May 22, 2009

Things Made From Other Things IV

In our Things Made From Other Things series we've featured some pretty inspiring and amazing objects made from stuff reclaimed from the trash bin. I think today's subject, however, stands alone as an example of ingenuity, artistic spirit and happy accident.

Pictured here is a recent shipment of musical instruments from Africa that we've been stocking for years. There are tambourines made with old bottle caps, and a xylophone with some resonant gourds strung beneath the keys.

My personal favorites, though, are the thumb pianos, which go by about a dozen different names in Africa. They're often made by flattening old nails and other scrap metal to make keys that are attached to a wooden box or even a sawed off tomato can.

My musicianship is rather limited (think Milli Vanilli without the lip-synching skills) so my love for the thumb piano is really as a spectator, and there are few spectacles greater than the one put on by Konono N°1, a collection of musicians from Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo. They've electrified their thumb pianos with homemade microphones, added some percussion assembled from the junkyard and come out with a layered, hypnotic sound that seems to combine the past from one place with the future from another place.

Visit their website and have a listen. It's not everyone's cup of tea, and I may have ruined my co-workers taste forever with my obsessive listening habits, but as you listen, just remember they're doing that with nails and hubcaps.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Orbs of Delight

We've been selling these glass ornaments at the store so quickly lately we thought we should feature them here as well. Each one feels like its own little universe, so you get the chance to play creator whenever you feel like it.

Fill one with a little water and drop an orchid in it; lodge a spidery epiphyte in one; fill one with dozens of glow in the dark fairies; put a little tealight in them and float some flames around the room.

In three sizes, all under $15. Write to us
here
if you'd like more information or pictures.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

The 3/50 Project



We first heard of the 3/50 project about two months ago and were really taken with the simplicity of the concept and the gravity of its implications. Basically, it asks you to imagine 3 local businesses that you would be saddened to see close their doors. Then, it asks you to commit to spending at least $50 a month total at local businesses.

If you and everyone you knew and everyone they knew were to shop this way, the economic impact starts to really add up. For every $100 spent in local businesses, $68 stays within the community by way of payroll, taxes, and other expenditures. When that same $100 is spent in national chain stores, just $43 stays in the local community.

Click on the picture above to go their site and learn more. Then SHOP LOCALLY!