Concept of Crafts of the World Online

When I started thinking about setting up Crafts of the World Online, my friend Dee suggested I could also start a blog. That got me thinking and here we are. With this blog I aim to tell you my stories, of countries and people I have seen and met, my travels, my impressions, the products and crafts and lots more. I don’t know how it will develop, as I expect and welcome you to contribute with comments, perhaps ideas, and therefore I am certain it will grow in a way I could never have envisaged. I am positive whatever comes out it will be informative and overall fun.

Crafts of the World Online aim to bring beautiful pieces of crafts from different parts of the world to you. We’ll start with pieces from Morocco and Tunisia and – of course – from Great Britain. As we grow – and you get to know us – we will expand and go further afield to bring you new objects and stories.

I’d like to fill the website only with objects that I like; I’d also like to include Fairtrade. I am hoping to find one or more projects and get involved with the communities and help them sell their products at a fair price, that will help sustain and develop the community.

I’d also like to introduce you the artisans and craftspeople who are responsible for the creation of the items on sale on the Crafts of the World Online website. In time, I’d like to be able to provide you with an ad-hoc/bespoke service, whereby we find you an item that you might have seen in person when on holiday, or seen on a magazine, etc. You might not have thought of buying it at the time, or could not envisage the place where to put it; you might have not had the money or space in the suitcase (not unusual nowadays with all the weight restrictions airports and carriers are imposing). Whatever the reason … you now wish you had that piece and we will be able to help you find it, get it to you and remind you perhaps of that holiday….

One thing I’d like to do is to make sure the items you buy are a little bit unique. I am not saying you will not find them anywhere else and you will be the only one possessing it/them; what I am saying though is that it won’t be like some items bought in ‘XYZ’ store which you can recognise a mile away and for many years to come (good or bad, I’ll leave that to you to decide).

Finally, I hope Crafts of the World Online will be a place where you come over and over again for a small present or something larger for your home. To buy a present, perhaps pulling resources together with friends and family or with a group of colleagues. A place that you visit regularly, check what’s new, read the stories and keep on recommending to all you know.

My web-designer, Steve, who has also created the structure of this blog, has placed a RSS button, which I am told helps you to know asap when an update on this blog had been made. Clever!

You can also follow us on Twitter @Craftsofworld and on our Facebook Page (Like us by following link on the right).
See you soon… Anna x

Posted in Blog | Leave a comment

Sailing up the Hudson River to New York

NY12 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkSailing up the Hudson River to New York

I was watching a film on TV recently that showed an aerial view of NY and the river,  for some reason I suddenly had a flash back and was reminded of the time I was on board of the QEII and we sailed all the way up the Hudson river to dock in New York, right in the centre.  Whoop, What an experience!

NY14 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY15 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY13 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkI think we entered the Hudson’s estuary around 3.30/4am one summer morning.

I got up just after 4am and stood at the front of the ship, by the flat pointed bit and enjoyed the changing views all the way.

The sky was still dark when we started our approach from the mouth of the Hudson.  We saw dawn appear in the sky and then the sun – which was reflecting on the well-known buildings and less known, fronting the river line – which was full in the sky by the time we docked.  What a scenery!

NY4 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY5 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY9 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY10 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New York

 

 

 

First it was the Statue of Liberty, then the changing landscape all the way slowly up river.  See the various photos [these have been scanned as they were taken in 1990, pre-digital camera (at least for the masses)].

NY1 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New York

Hudson River, approaching Statue of LibertyStatue of Liberty, NYStatue of LibertyStatue of Liberty, NYStatue of Liberty, NY

 

 

 

 

 

 

That morning was a very memorable experience, it took several hours to reach Manhattan, and we docked very close to the Empire State building.

NY+QEII from ESB 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New York
View from Empire State Building, River and QEII

NYsouthview 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New York

NY view from ESB 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkThe fact that we were only 4-5 days away from home (UK) after 7 months spent around the Pacific, Chinese seas and Japan was only marginally more exciting.

Yes, I spent 7 ‘long’ months on board of the QEII and 6 of those months were spent in Japan between Tokyo and Osaka, in between we had short cruises and touched beautiful (and sometimes not very) and interesting places: Philippines, Bali, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong.  The latter I came to love very much and explored a great deal.  This was when HK was still in the hands of the British and for us – spending so much time in countries where even the writing on a shop or newspaper was unreadable – was a heaven for the eyes, tongue, ears…

In those days some parts of HK and most of the New Territories (the area behind HK city and before mainland China) were barely untouched and unspoiled.  From my point
of view the intervening 18-20 years have spoiled them with the huge housing sky-scrapers and train lines zigzagging the once virgin New Territories.  Those memories are now in the past and in my memory and pictures and have given way to a totally different new world.

NY8 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY6 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY7 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY132 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New YorkNY bye 150x150 Sailing up the Hudson River to New York[Apologies for the erratic setting of the photos... WP had different ideas than mine and it won! icon sad Sailing up the Hudson River to New York ]
Posted in Blog, General, Travel | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off

Mother’s Day, Mothering Sunday, Mothers Day…you name it

Mother’s Day, Mothering Sunday, Mothers Day there is enough to confuse the best of us. Also why is it celebrated on different days of the year and not on the same day everywhere? As Mother’s Day is fast approaching this year – 18th March – I thought it would be a fit topic for a blog. In a way it is a journey around the globe discovering the history of this term and day of celebration as well as the costumes connected to it.

Mothering Sunday Vs Mother’s Day

Nowadays Mothering Sunday is often called Mother’s Day in UK and it is regarded as synonymous with Mother’s Day, which is celebrated in other countries around the world, although many still prefer the more historically accurate ‘Mothering Sunday’.

Mother’s Day – History

The history of Mother’s Day goes back many centuries – as far as the Egyptians. Early Christians celebrated the Mother’s festival on the fourth Sunday of Lent to honour Mary, the mother of Christ. Later on, a religious order, included the celebration of all mothers and named it as the Mothering Sunday. English colonists settled in America discontinued the tradition of Mothering Sunday because of lack of time, however in 1872 Julia Ward Howe organized a day for mothers dedicated to peace. This was a landmark in the history of Mother’s Day.

Spiritual Origins of Mothers Day

The practice of honouring Motherhood is rooted in antiquity, and past rites had strong symbolic and spiritual tones and tended to celebrate Goddesses as the symbol of Mothers. The maternal objects of adoration ranged from mythological female deities to the Christian Church itself. Only in the past few centuries did celebrations of Motherhood develop a decidedly human focus. The human touch to Mother’s Day is relatively new.

One of the earliest historical records of celebrating a ‘Mother’ deity can be found among the ancient Egyptians, who held an annual festival to honour the goddess Isis, who was commonly regarded as the Mother of the pharaohs.

The festival of Isis was also celebrated by the Romans who used the event to commemorate an important battle and mark the beginning of the Winter. Despite being an imported deity, Isis held a place at the Roman temple. However the root in the Roman’s Mother’s Day is perhaps found more precisely in the celebration of the goddess Cybele, or Magna Mater (the Great Mother). Cybele derives from the Greek Goddess Rhea, who was the Mother of most of the major deities, including Zeus. Rhea was celebrated as a mother goddess, and her festival took place around the time of the Vernal Equinox (Spring equinox). In Rome and Asia Minor (Roman empire), Cybele was the major Mother deity similarly to Rhea, the mother of the Gods in Greek culture. The Roman celebration of Cybele or Magna Mater fell around the 15 and 22 of March, at a similar time the Greek would have celebrated Rhea.

Modern times celebrations

Another holiday/festival to celebrate and honour Motherhood came from Europe. It fell on the 4th Sunday of Lent (the 40 days of fasting preceding Easter Sunday). Early Christians initially used this day to honour the church in which they were baptized, and that they saw as their ‘Mother Church’.

In the 1600′s a decree in England broadened the celebration to include all real Mothers and referred to the day as Mothering Day. During this Lenten Sunday, servants and trade workers were allowed to travel back to their towns of origin to visit their families. Mothering Day also provided a one-day reprieve from the fasting and penance of Lent so that families across England could enjoy a family feast and where mothers were the main guest of honour. Mothers would be presented with cakes and flowers and overall the mothers would get to see their distant children.

Mothering Day or Mothering Sunday in United Kingdom and Ireland

Early Christians in England celebrated the Mother’s festival on the 4th Sunday of Lent to honour Mary, the mother of Christ. Interestingly, later on a religious order stretched the holiday to include all mothers, and named it as the Mothering Sunday. In the 16th century people working out of their homes were expected to return to the “mother” church (the spiritual power that gave them life and protected them from any harm).

In the United Kingdom and Ireland, this celebration is known as Mothering Sunday. The practice of visiting one’s ‘mother’ church every year on the Lenten Sunday, meant that most mothers would be reunited with their children as young apprentices and young women in service were released by their masters to make the journey home that weekend to go visit their families.

In some Church of England churches, this day is the only day during Lent when marriages can be celebrated.

In the early 1900s (1935), the practice of celebrating Mothering Sunday fell into disuse. However, after the 2nd World War the tradition started to be revived, partly inspired by what was happening in the United States. Efforts were made to revive the festival in the 1910s–1920s, but it wasn’t after World War II when American soldiers brought Mother’s Day celebrations to the UK and they were merged with the tradition of Mothering Sunday which was still celebrated by the Church of England. In the 1950s the celebrations started gathering memento as were seen as a great commercial opportunity.

Irish and UK people started to celebrate Mother’s Day on the 4th Sunday of Lent, the same day on which Mothering Sunday had been celebrated for centuries before. Some of the Mothering Sunday traditions were revived, such as the tradition of eating cake on that day, although nowadays Simnel cake is eaten instead of traditional cakes eaten in the olden days. The two celebrations have now mixed up and many people think that they are the same thing.

Recently the day was dubbed ‘Mother’s Day’ or ‘Mothers’ Day’ however sometimes ‘Mothers Day’ is also used.

Mothering Sunday, also known as…

Other names attributed to the festival of Mothering Day were: Refreshment Sunday, Mid-Lent Sunday, Simnel Sunday and Rose Sunday. Simnel Sunday as baking Simnel Cakes to celebrate the reunion of families during Lent. Rose Sunday is sometimes used as an alternative title for Laetare Sunday, as witnessed by the purple robes of Lent being replaced by rose-coloured ones in some churches.

Simnel Cake – Facts

  • Nowadays the Simnel cake is strongly associated with this holiday. It was also that Simnel Cakes became associated with Mothering Sunday as young servants/maids were allowed to bake a cake to take home to their mother as a gift. Fruit cakes known as “Simnel Cakes” became one of the most common gifts on Mothering Sundays;
  • Around 1600, when the celebration was only held in England and Scotland, a different kind of pastry was preferred;
  • In England they served a cake called “Mothering Sunday Buns” with raisin and butter icing;
  • In Northern England and Scotland some preferred “Carlings”, a pancake made of steeped peas fried in butter.
Simnel Cake 150x150 Mother’s Day, Mothering Sunday, Mothers Day...you name it

Simnel Cake

As with most Mothering Sunday customs and traditions, the Simnel Cake has also a religious flavour: and on top of the cake are placed 11 marzipan balls, signifying 11 of the 12 apostles of Christ, excluding the notorious apostle Judas, who had betrayed Jesus.

Mother’s Day in USA

The English colonists that settled in America discontinued the tradition of Mothering Sunday because of lack of time. In 1872 Julia Ward Howe organized a day for mothers dedicated to peace.

Julia Howe had become very distraught by the deaths during the Civil War that she called on all mothers to come together to protest against what she perceived as senseless killing. With this in mind she organised an international Mother’s Day celebrating peace and motherhood. This has become the landmark in the history of modern Mother’s Day.

Julia Howe even proposed to convert the 4th of July into Mother’s Day and dedicate the day to peace. However the 2nd June was designated for this celebration and in 1873, 18 women’s groups celebrated this new Mother’s holiday in cities across North America.

Even not successful Julie Howe has planted the seed and in 1907 Anne Jarvis from Philadelphia set up a group to celebrate Mother’s Day and to honour of her mother. The first Mother’s Day was a church service honouring Anna’s mother to which Anna handed out white carnations, her mother’s favourite flowers. Anne Jarvis’ hard work paid off when in 1914, President Woodrow Wilson proclaimed the second Sunday in May as a national holiday in honour of mothers. The celebration became more and more popular and it became more commercialised.

Anne Jarvis was not happy about this and in 1923 sued to stop a Mother’s Day event and sale of flowers. During the 1930′s she was arrested for disturbing the peace at the American War Mothers group.

Watch the video to see what became of Anne Jarvis:


 

Anna Jarvis died in 1948, blind, poor and with no children. She never knew that the care she received during her last years of her life had been paid anonymously by The Florist’s Exchange.

By the time of her death, over 40 countries observed the Mother’s Day. Today white carnations are given to remember deceased Mothers, and pink or red to pay tribute to Mothers who are alive.

red  white  pink carnation happy mothers day3 150x150 Mother’s Day, Mothering Sunday, Mothers Day...you name it
Carnations

To this day every year the American President is required to proclaim Mother’s Day holiday shortly before it is due and while he proclaims the event a group of mothers, who has lost a child in the a war, set up a protest against war. Mother’s day in America is celebrated the 2nd Sunday in May.

 


Mothers Day in some parts of the World

The majority of countries celebrating Mother’s Day do so on the second Sunday of May.

Below are how some countries celebrate it:

Canada - Canada was one of the first nations to pick up the US version of Mother’s Day,.

Argentina – Though most of South America observes Mother’s Day in May, Argentina celebrates it the 2nd Sunday in October. This is due to the country’s being located in the southern hemisphere. This corresponds to Argentina’s springtime.

India – A westernized version of Mother’s Day is officially observed on 10th May mainly in large cities. However, Hindus have been celebrating Durga Puja – a divine mother derived from ancient Greece – with a 10 day festival in October. This festival is now one of the biggest events in India and families spend weeks preparing food and gifts.

Japan – Japanese Christians were celebrating Mother’s Day based on the American practice. During and after WWII the practice was banned along with all other western customs. After the war, however, the tradition was taken up again to help comfort to the Mothers who had lost children in the war and by 1949, the celebration of Mother’s Day had again spread throughout the country associated with an art contest for children. The event was held every 4 years and the children would enter a drawing of their mothers, and the winning drawings would tour through Japan with an art exhibition celebrating Mothers and Peace. Today the Japanese celebrate Mother’s Day on 2nd Sunday of May.

Asia & Australia as well as many Asian countries celebrate Mother’s Day drawing on from the American’s tradition.

Bahrain – In Bahrain Mother’s Day coincides with the first day of spring, observed as March 21, the same is in Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates.

China – China’s Mother’s Day draws heavily from the United States’ tradition and carnations are a very popular gift and the most sold type of flower. In 1997 it this day was set to help poor mothers, especially in rural areas such as China’s western region. The official government’s Chinese newspaper, explained in an article that even though the tradition originates from the States, Chinese people can accept the holiday because it is in line with the country’s traditional ethics of respect for the elderly and parents.

In recent years there has been other non-governmental suggestion to celebrate Mother’s Day in memory of Meng Mu which is supported by 100 Confucian scholars. This group also asked to replace the carnations with lilies, which in ancient times, were planted by Chinese mothers when children left home. This festival remains unofficial and it is only celebrated in a small number of cities

Hong Kong – Hong Kong’s holiday is noted for its custom to pay respect to the parents of the mother, if she is deceased.

Italy – The Italians celebrate the day with a big feast and a cake. Typically Italian schoolchildren will make something to bring home to their mothers and the family will take care of the chores for the day. Mother’s Day in Italy was celebrated for the first time on 12th May 1957, in Assisi thanks to the initiative of a parish priest. The celebration was so successful that the following year it was adopted throughout Italy, where since then it is celebrated on the 2nd Sunday in May.

Sweden – Sweden’s Mother’s Day, which takes place on the last Sunday in May, has a strong charitable focus: the Swedish Red Cross which sells small plastic flowers leading up to the holiday, with the proceeds raised being given to poor mothers and their children.

Thailand – Perhaps the most unique Asian Mother’s Day holiday takes place in Thailand. The celebration coincides with the birthday of their beloved queen, Sirikit Kitayakara, who has reigned since 1950. Her birthday, and therefore Mother’s Day, takes place on 12th August.

Germany - In the 1920s, Germany had the lowest birth-rate in Europe. At the same time, influential groups in society thought that mothers should be honoured. These groups had one belief in common: the celebration of the values of motherhood. In 1923 this resulted in the unanimous adoption of Mother’s Day which they imported from America and Norway and in 1925, the Mother’s Day Committee started focusing the holiday as being about the level of population Germany. The holiday was seen as a means to get women to bear more children, and nationalists saw it as a way of rejuvenating the nation. The holiday did not celebrate individual women, but an idealized standard of motherhood. Some local authorities decided to make the holiday a day to support economically larger families or single-mother families and subsidies were given to families in economic needs.

During 1933–1945 with the Nazi party in power all changed radically. They started promoting the role of mothers as that of giving healthy children to the German nation. The Nazi party’s intention was to create a pure ‘Aryan race’. Also the government promoted the death of a mother’s sons in battle as the highest embodiment of patriotic motherhood.

This new official Nazis spin brought discontent among organizations such as the Catholic and Protestant churches and local women organizations. Local authorities resisted the guidelines from the government and kept assigning resource to families that were in economical need.

In 1938 the Nazi’s government started issuing an award ‘Mother’s cross’, with different categories depending on the number of children. The cross intended to encourage having more children, and recipients had to have at least 4 children. The award promoted loyalty among German women and it was a popular even though it had little material value. The winners of the award had to be examined by doctors and social workers according to genetic and racial values that were considered beneficial. Friends and family were also examined for possible flaws that could disqualify them, and they had to be “racially and morally fit”. Among the criteria they had to be ‘German-blooded’ and they could not have vices like drinking. Criteria against were, for example, ‘unfeminine’ behaviour like smoking or poor housekeeping. Even contact with a Jew could disqualify a potential recipient. Application of policies was uneven as doctors promoted medical criteria over racial criteria, and local authorities promoted economical need over any other criteria.

Nowadays Mother’s Day is celebrated on the 2nd Sunday of May like most European counties.

Mother’s Day Trivia

  • In the vast majority of the world’s languages, the word for “mother” begins with the letter ‘M’;
  • A mother giraffe often gives birth while standing, so the new born first experience outside the womb is a 1.8-meter drop;
  • Just like people, mother chimpanzees often develop lifelong relationships with their offspring.

 

Posted in Blog, Customs, General, Life Style | Leave a comment

Cactus Silk (also known as Sabra, Vegetable or Agave Silk)

If you search on the web for cactus silk or vegetable silk it is likely you get presented with a lot of silk plants!

Having purchased some cushions and a pouffe in Vegetable Silk from my Moroccan supplier, I was curious to find out more. It took me some time.

Cactus silk is also known as Agave silk, or vegetable silk or vegan silk and also as Sabra silk, the Moroccan name.

Some of the products made with this fiber are certainly different. Wherever you are going in Morocco, you are coming across little shops packed with tons of thread in myriad of colours. shiny, bright colours with which buttons and trims finish off the traditional ‘djellaba’ ;

djellaba 150x150 Cactus Silk (also known as Sabra, Vegetable or Agave Silk)

man wearing traditional djellaba

Stripes cushion 150x150 Cactus Silk (also known as Sabra, Vegetable or Agave Silk)

Cushion made of sabra silk

however there are also items made in this vegetable-vegan silk in much more subtle colours and the end result is of understated and classic yet modern items of soft furnishing.

Silk Pouffe Att 1 150x127 Cactus Silk (also known as Sabra, Vegetable or Agave Silk)

Cactus silk - pouffe

 

 

 

 

But I am running ahead of myself.  Let’s start at the beginning.

“Sabra” Cactus-Silk

Cactus silk or Sabra silk is a luxurious fabric made from the Agave Cactus in the capital of Morocco, Fes.

1501 22 52 Cactus web 150x150 Cactus Silk (also known as Sabra, Vegetable or Agave Silk)

Catcus plantJardin Majorelle, Marrakech - Cactus and agave

CIMG2478 150x150 Cactus Silk (also known as Sabra, Vegetable or Agave Silk)

Jardin Majorelle, Marrakech - Cactus and agave

Also known as cactus silk, Sabra silk is a natural fiber harvested from sustainable sources of Saharan Aloe Vera Cactus (the Aloe Vera plant being part of the Agave family).

The fabric is a 100% vegetable silk blend of extracted filaments from the aloe cactus grown in Morocco. It is sought for its quality, strength and beauty since millennia. The process to produce sabra silk has not changed for centuries. Once the Cactus plant is collected from the long agave plants, the long spiky leaves are crushed and the fibres washed and hammered, then the leaves are soaked in water to separate the fibres & filaments and then these are spun and woven to make “silk thread which are then dyed in different colours. The textile produced has a high elasticity and this makes Sabra-Silk free of wrinkles.

You have come across – when walking through the narrow lanes of the Medina in Marrakech –men threading fine, almost invisible, fibers on spools. These are then twisted into thread by small battery powered twisters and tacked along the walls of the medina while they were being created. The colourful threads of the cactus silk are then sold in spools.

colourful threads 150x150 Cactus Silk (also known as Sabra, Vegetable or Agave Silk)

Cactus silk threads

Napkin holder set 2 150x150 Cactus Silk (also known as Sabra, Vegetable or Agave Silk)

Napking Ties covered with Cactus silk threads

Sabra Silk is hand-loomed in Morocco [See a picture of a weaver at work] and some of the products are created with strips of the silks alternate with camel’s wool. Some have Chenille, and cotton yarn in contrasting colours which enhances the amazingly vibrant, almost metallic shine of the cloths. This long and time consuming process makes some of its products (cushions, rugs, textile) very expensive and at the same time pretty unique.

Items made of cactus/sabra silk can be washed at 30 degrees or dry-leaned. It is safe to iron them on a low steam, although as they are almost wrinkle-free, this is hardly necessary..

 

 

Posted in Customs, Morocco, Textile | 1 Comment

Amber – What is Amber – Facts and Useful Information

Amber - What is Amber

Amber is fossilized tree resin (not sap), which has been appreciated for its colour since Neolithic times. Amber is used as an ingredient in perfumes, as a healing agent in folk medicine, and as jewellery. Because it originates as a soft, sticky tree resin, amber sometimes contains animal and plant material as inclusions. Amber occurring in coal seams is also called ‘resinite’, and ‘ambrite’ when found specifically within New Zealand coal seams.
The English word ‘amber’ derives from the Arabic anbar, Medieval Latin ambar and Old French ambre. The word originally referred to a precious oil derived from the Sperm whale (now called ambergris). The term was extended to fossil resin circa 1400, and this became the main meaning as the use of ambergris declined.  In French “ambre gris” was then distinguished from “ambre jaune“; ‘ambre gris’ (gray amber) was ambergris; ‘ambre jaune’ (yellow amber) was the fossil resin we now call amber.
Theophrastus mentioned ‘amber’ – possibly the first historical mention of the material – in the 4th century BC. The Greek name for amber was ηλεκτρον (electron) and was connected to the Sun God. The modern terms “electricity” and “electron” derive from the Greek word for amber. Pliny the Elder mentioned the presence of insects in amber and mentioned it in his ‘Naturalis Historia’, this lead him to guess that amber might have been liquid at some point and able to cover the bodies of insects. Hence he named the substance succinum or gum-stone. The word “electricity” is derived from the Greek name for Amber, electrum. This is because amber can acquire an electric charge when rubbed. Thales described this magical property in about 600 BC – and it remains one of the most useful methods to identifying real amber in gold and silver jewellery. There have always been claims that amber rosaries and amulets can actually conduct current, discharging excess energy in the body. Amber has long been worn and carried by men, as a talisman against sexual impotence.
Amber beads 150x150 Amber – What is Amber   Facts and Useful Information

beads of resins from tree, in time they will become amber

Amber will soften if heat is applied and it will eventually burn. This lead to it being named Bernstein or burn-Stone is German. If heated above 200°C, amber will decompose, producing an “oil of amber” and leaving a black residue which is known as “amber pitch” – which when dissolved in oil of turpentine or in linseed oil – forms “amber varnish”.

How was it formed?

Molecular polymerization, resulting from high pressures and temperatures produced by overlying sediment, transforms the resin first into copal. Sustained heat and pressure drives terpenes* off, resulting in the formation of amber. Copal is an immature resin and it is sometimes passed off as amber. It is said to be immature because not all the volatile terpenes have left the resin via geological processes over millions of years. Therefore it is younger in age than true amber. [*Terpenes and terpenoids are the primary constituents of the essential oils of many types of plants and flowers].

Botanical origin

Fossil resins from Europe fall into two categories: the famous Baltic ambers and another. Fossil resins from the Americas and Africa are closely related to the modern genus Hymenaea (plant of the legumes family); while Baltic ambers are thought to be fossil resins from ‘Japanese Umbrella-pine’ used to live in north Europe.
Historically, the coast around Königsberg in Prussia was the world’s leading source of amber. After 1945 the territory around Königsberg was turned into Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia, where it is now systematically mined. About 90% of the world’s extractable amber is still located in Russia on the Baltic Sea and pieces of amber torn from the seafloor are cast up by the waves, and collected by hand, dredging or diving. Elsewhere, amber is mined, both in open works and underground galleries. Amber from the Baltic Sea has been extensively traded since antiquity.
Small fragments that used to be thrown away or used only for varnish, are now used on a large scale in the formation of “amberoid” or “pressed amber”. The pieces are carefully heated with exclusion of air and compressed into a uniform mass by intense hydraulic pressure. The product is extensively used for the production of cheap jewellery and articles for smoking.

Geological record

The oldest amber recovered dates to the ca.320 million years ago. Other old amber specimens come from the Middle East: Lebanon and Jordan. This amber is roughly 125–135 million years old and is considered of high scientific value. Many remarkable insects and spiders were recently discovered in the amber of Jordan, including the oldest zorapterans, clerid beetles, umenocoleid roaches, and achiliid planthoppers. [Not sure I really want to know what they look like!]. Relics of flora occur as inclusions trapped within the amber while the resin was still fresh, suggesting relations with the flora of Eastern Asia and the southern part of North America.

Paleontological significance

Amber is a unique preservation medium, preserving otherwise unfossilisable parts of organisms – even their soft tissues – which are helpful in the reconstruction of ecosystems and organisms. As seen in the movie Jurassic Park, mosquitoes can still have the blood of their victims inside them, sealed and kept intact forever. It’s no wonder Amber is a symbol of eternity and eternal divinity!
Amber sometimes contains animals or plant that became caught in the resin as it was secreted. Insects, spiders and their webs, annelids, frogs, crustaceans, bacteria, marine microfossils, wood, flowers and fruit, hair, feathers and other small organisms have been recovered in ambers dating back to 130 million years ago.

Appearance

Amber occurs in a range of different colours. From the usual yellow-orange-brown associated with the colour “amber”, to a whitish colour through to a pale lemon yellow, brown and almost black, even (very rarely) violet.
Much of the most highly-prized amber is transparent, in contrast to the very common cloudy amber and opaque amber. Opaque amber contains numerous minute bubbles.
Sometimes amber retains the form of drops and stalactites, just as it exuded from the ducts and receptacles of the trees.
Amber can be classified into several forms:
• Natural Baltic amber – gemstone which has undergone mechanical treatment only (for instance: grinding, cutting, turning or polishing) without any change to its natural properties;
• Modified Baltic amber – gemstone subjected only to thermal or high-pressure treatment, which changed its physical properties, including transparency and colour;
• Reconstructed (pressed) Baltic amber – gemstone made of Baltic amber pieces pressed in high temperature and under high pressure without additional components;
• Bonded Baltic amber – gemstone consisting of two or more parts of natural, modified or reconstructed Baltic amber bonded together with the use of the smallest possible amount of a colourless binding agent necessary to join the pieces.
Amber increases in value with the rarity and perfection of the entrapped object. Complete insect specimens are rare and command top price.
Copal, is also a tree resin but it hasn’t fully fossilized to amber. It is usually only thousands of years old, instead of millions of years. There is strong debate about some deposits of African amber as to whether it is copal or true amber.

Use

Amber has been used since antiquity in the manufacture of jewellery and ornaments, and also in folk medicine. Amber also forms the flavouring of ‘aquavit’ and it is used as an ingredient in perfumes.

Jewellery

Amber has been used since the Stone Age, from 13,000 years ago. Amber ornaments have been found in Mycenaean tombs and elsewhere across Europe. Nowadays it is also used in the manufacture of smoking and glassblowing mouthpieces. Amber is most often set in gold and silver jewellery. Mediterranean countries started to trade in Amber for jewellery making as far back as 2500 BC. Amber from this period has been found 600 miles from its place of origin. Amber was very popular and highly valued in this time period, because it is softer than minerals and was easier to work with primitive methods.
CIMG3068 150x150 Amber – What is Amber   Facts and Useful Information
Amber Necklace

(See this product in our onlineshop).

Historic medicinal uses

Amber has long been used in folk medicine for its healing properties. Amber and extracts were used in ancient Greece for a variety of treatments through to the Middle Ages and up until the early twentieth century.

Scent of amber and perfumery

In ancient China it was customary to burn amber during large festivities.
Although, when burned amber does give off a characteristic “pine-wood” fragrance, modern products, such as perfume, do not normally use actual amber. This is due to the fact that fossilized amber produces very little scent. In perfumery, scents referred as “amber” are often created to emulate the opulent golden warmth of the fossil.
Ambergris is the waxy aromatic substance created in the intestines of sperm whales and was used in making perfumes both in ancient times as well as modern ones. The scent of amber was originally derived from emulating the scent of ambergris, but due to the endangered status of the sperm whale, the scent of amber is now largely derived from labdanum [Labdanum is a sticky brown resin obtained from the shrubs Cistus ladanifer (conifers)]. The term “amber” is loosely used to describe a scent that is warm, musky, rich and honey-like, and also somewhat oriental and earthy. It can be synthetically created or derived from natural resins. When derived from natural resins it is most often created out of labdanum. Benzoin is usually part of the recipe. Vanilla and cloves are sometimes used to enhance the aroma.

Amber is technically not a gemstone or mineral

Early physicians prescribed amber for headaches, heart problems, arthritis and a variety of other ailments. In ancient times, amber was carried by travellers for protection. To the early Christians, amber signified the presence of the Lord. In the Far East, amber is the symbol of courage; Asian cultures regard amber as the ‘soul of the tiger’ and Egyptians placed a piece of amber in the casket of a loved one to ensure the body would forever remain whole.
It is worn for general good luck, financial stability and to ward off danger from witchcraft. It is rich in medicinal values and used for curing many chronic ailments.
The wearer must refrain from luxuries and temptations of life. It relieves of tensions and is good for those interested in social and humanitarian causes. It should be kept away from heat or sun.
Amber is highly recommended for those who often have to meet challenging situations and frustrating atmosphere. It is considered to brings a care free, sunny disposition, to promote good luck and success, and dissolve oppositions.
Healers use it for stomach, spleen and kidney complaints; joint problems and teething pain in babies.
The gemstone Amber is one of the birthstones listed for the Sun Sign for Taurus.
Powers attributed to amber include love, strength, luck, healing, and protection, calming for hyperactivity and stressed nerves, finds humour and joy. Legend says that Amber was believed to provide magicians and sorcerers with special enhanced powers.
Helps remove energy blockages, strengthens physical body. Excellent for enhancing consciousness. Amber represents the division between an individual’s energy and cosmic energy, the individual’s soul and the universal soul of all living things. It is the symbol of divinity. Ancient painters used the colour amber to denote the divine. The faces of gods and goddesses, heroes and saints were all painted amber.

How to recognise Amber

Several tests are known to determine whether your piece is real or not.
Baltic amber is considered the highest quality in the world. But because amber is a lightweight organic fossil resin, it is possible to imitate it by using lightweight plastics and synthetics. Some imitations are made with the purpose of creating false insect inclusions, rather than creating a false piece of amber in general. There are a few tests one can do to determine real amber from imitations.
Plastics are the most common amber imitations and can be distinguished from natural amber. Celluloid is composed of cellulose nitrate and camphor. Amber imitators of celluloid and glass can be distinguished from amber by the fact that when rubbed the imitation does not become electro-statically charged and gives off the odour of camphor. Amber becomes electro-statically charged when rubbed and like plastic both are warm to the touch and can be distinguished from glass, which is cool to the touch, heavier and has a higher specific gravity. The following tests are the most commonly available and easiest to perform. However care should be taken to avoid damage to the piece tested.

Static test
. This is the simplest and safest test. Amber is warm to the touch and when rubbed, it will become electro-statically charged and will attract lint & dust particles. This is what the ancient Greeks discovered and named it “electron”, which is where we get the term “electricity”.
It’s electric! Amber holds a charge of static electricity and was actually used to remove lint in earlier times. To see if your “amber” is static, place some small pieces of tissue on a flat surface. Rub the amber vigorously on the carpet or with a piece of velvet until it is warm and hold it closely above the tissue pieces. If the pieces of tissue are not attracted to the specimen, it is not amber. If tissue is attracted to the specimen, it may be amber.
Hot, hot, hot. Is your specimen warm or cold to the touch? Amber should feel warm when handled at room temperature.
Does it float? True amber floats in salt water. This is how it was discovered – floating on the Baltic sea. Amber is only slightly denser than saltwater, and can be carried vast distances by the sea. To see if your “amber” floats, dissolve two tablespoons of table salt in eight ounces of water. Drop your “amber” into the solution. If it sinks, it is not amber. If it floats, it is probably amber. This method only works if the amber is removed from its setting.
Pine fresh scent. Rub the specimen briskly on a piece of cloth until it gets warm, and then smell it. If it’s real amber, it should emit a mild pine or turpentine odor. If it smells like plastic or chemicals, it isn’t amber. Beware that if it has the right smell, it still may be copal.
The scratch test. Real amber has a hardness of approximately 2.5 on the Moh’s scale. This is quite soft, but your fingernail alone should not be able to scratch it. Try scratching your “amber” gemstone with your fingernail. If it makes a mark, it isn’t amber. If it doesn’t make a mark, it may be amber. This is an effective test in distinguishing copal from amber, as copal is very soft can be scratched with a fingernail.
Does it glow? Place your “amber” specimen under a short-wave ultraviolet light. If the specimen is fluorescence with a pale blue under the light, it may be amber. If it doesn’t glow at all, or glows a color other than pale blue, it is not amber. Copal doesn’t fluoresce.
Baby oil test. Drop your specimen into a clear glass of mineral oil (Johnson’s Baby Oil works fine). Mineral oil and amber have very similar refractive indexes. If the edges of the “amber” appear as a dark outline or light halo, the specimen is not amber. If it is difficult to distinguish the edges of the “amber”, it may be real.
Lick it. Wash the specimen with mild soapy water then rinse and dry thoroughly. Taste it – do you detect a chemical, strong, or unpleasant taste? If so, it isn’t amber. Remember, amber comes from the trees, so it shouldn’t taste unnatural or manmade. If the specimen has no taste (or one that is very subtle) it may be amber.
A Bug’s Life. If your specimen contains an insect or other animal, try to have it identified!!
Posted in Blog, General, Morocco, Turkey | Leave a comment

Little man artisan – Moroccan humour or trying it on?

Recently my friend and I spent a w/e in Marrakech and are still thinking if the guy in the video tried it on or it was really his ‘Moroccan’ sense on humour.
My friend was looking for Xmas presents and wasn’t very impressed with the Moroccan selling style and took the view of approaching and buying only from people/sellers that were not harassing her. This is how we came across this artisan, who very quietly was going on with his own business in a little alley of the Marrakechi Medina. We went around his place of business in the course of two days. Yes, no, yes, maybe, shall I buy it, or maybe not? My friend found the choice of goods available in Marrakech overwhelming and making a decision on what to buy & who for became a major decision-making choice. Eventually she decided some wood boxes. Goods were checked, price agreed, goods wrapped and paid. Then little man artisan decided to produce a little something which – according to him – was a purveyor of good luck if placed in the bedroom (we never got to discover how it would bring good luck!). I stood aside, not wanting to be a disruptive element in the purchasing process or the carving of such ‘lucky’ charm. Once all was concluded, items purchased, charm carved I was all ready to move on. But no, little man artisan decided he wanted me to have a lucky charm too, insisted I sat down next to him and watch him as he was doing the carving. So my friend and I swapped seats. As I started watching him I thought I might as well make a short video of it. I ask little man artisan for permission to film him and he agreed, so I proceeded to take the video. While he was carving various people passed by and stopped to take pictures. As you will see from the video all was amicable and relaxed…..
(Now watch the video)

So you can imagine my shock at his request! Hence the sudden termination of the video as I stood up and left, soon to be followed by my friend – who told me later had her jaw to the floor by the surprise request!
Our next stop was another artisan, known by me for his leather notebooks and where my friend had decided she was going to purchase some lovely boxes covered in brightly coloured leather. We got to this other shop a few lanes away in the Medina and a few minutes after we got there little man artisan (the one of the wood carving) joined us and gave me the lucky charm he had in the meantime finished carving. All seriously he told me it was all a joke!
IMG00936 20111030 1202 150x150 Little man artisan   Moroccan humour or trying it on?

To this moment I am not sure if it was or not a joke. On watching the video and listening to the conversation I realised he asked for €s and not dirham (Moroccan currency). So maybe it was a joke. On the other side why not saying something right away as he saw our reaction? And all the time he was ever so serious!
I am still not convinced it was a joke….but maybe…? If it was, it certainly show the difference in cultures even in the way we joke and make humour, as we certainly did not take it as a joke.
You can make your mind up and let me k now what you think.

Posted in Artisanat, Blog, Customs, General, Life Style, Morocco | Leave a comment

Division of labour in Morocco (Casablanca)

This video was filmed in Casablanca, while en-route to Marrakech, Morocco. The plane was ½ hour late on the already revised arrival time (+hr on eta time, after rerouting via Casablanca) in the end we were 1.5hr late to reach Marrakech airport.
You can clearly see the division of labour is not very high as in this case we seem to have too many chiefs and not enough cooks. The one labourer is not exactly working himself to the ground – hence our captain on the plane already announcing we are about to take off imminently, the crew going through the various security trainings and the loading still slowly going ahead on the ground.

It certainly provided us with entertainment for the hour or so we were ‘grounded’ in Casablanca.

Enjoy and let me know what you think.

Posted in Blog, Customs, General, Life Style | 1 Comment

Looking for a textile’s co-operative in a Tunisian village

I love reading travel guides of the countries I visit, ‘Lonely Planet’ and ‘The Rough Guide’ are usually best for me. Anyway, in one of these or both I found that in a Tunisian village – not far to where I was staying - there was a textile’s co-operative where locals were working and producing products for the local and foreign markets.  Even better, the village – Beni Khiar – had a sunday market! Yuppiee!!

And so I set out to go to this village to find the co-operative.  It never occurred to me it was sunday (I was on holiday!).  I prefer to travel with public transport as a. it is cheaper; b. you get to meet the locals, see how they live/behave, etc…  Sunday buses in Tunisia are not as frequent as other days of the week (nothing different from UK or other parts of EU, as far as I know), which meant my bus was late and when I got to Nabeul I saw the bus for Beni Khiar slip under my nose. icon cry Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village … and the next bus was a couple of hours later!  So I set out to look for a taxi (I am not very fond of  taxi or their drivers …ssssssh, don’t tell anyone!) and – having found one – I got in and shortly after we arrived in Beni Khiar.  I must say, it was not very far at all – if you know where you are going – however a little bit too far to walk in the hot sun, even at 10.30am.  Amaizingly, although just outside the main town of Nabeul, capital of the Cape Bon area, Beni Khiar was so remote and rural!  

Beni Khiar

As I said earlier Beni Khiar is not big and it is on the outskirts of Nabeul, almost following on from it.  When I arrived the market was in full swing.  Nothing different from what I’d seen in Beni Khalleb a week or so before – more on this in another blog – only smaller and less interesting.  Still I went through it without being mobbed, quite nice. 

June 2010 304 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Market & Mosque in Beni Khiar

June 2010 302 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Police Station & market crowd

June 2010 299 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Having a chat while shopping

June 2010 293 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Local wares

June 2010 278 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Portico in Beni Khiar

June 2010 296 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village
Shop holder and display

 

My reason for being in Beni Khiar was to find this co-op as I had read on the travel guides it was a place famous for  wool and its weavers and the co-operative was also selling its products directly.

The taxi driver dropped me in the middle of the village, not really knowing where the co-op was or caring about it.  Very helpful!  I started in the direction the taxi driver had indicated and soon found myself nearing the end of the village by the main street. Armed with my guides and phrase books (even my broken French was at times too much for the locals which only spoke Tunisian lingo) I approached some women in a shop. After much confabulating among themselves, they indicated back to the centre of the village, towards the market.  Back I walked, when I got back to the main square I saw the police station! What better place to ask for directions!?! So in I went…

June 2010 303 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Police Station in Beni Khiar

The ladies in the shop had indicated down the road.  At the main square the road split hence the decision to pop in the Police Station.  Nothing like you would expect.  A large cavernous bare room with a wooden table by the door (for the breeze) and two people (cannot remember if they wore uniform) smoking and chatting and not terribly interested when they saw me entering…after much talking (among themselves) and asking other passers by and insistance (mine) that this co-op must be in their village as the tourist guides said so; finally one of them remembered that there was a place with a textile co-op, they indicated the way and after more asking, I found the place I was looking for!   The walk to this place took me past many butchers shops, the 1st one I nearly hit the head of  a huge cow’s head hanging by the entrance! 

June 2010 279 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Local butcher & cow's head

As a non-meat eater I was not too impressed, and lets not talk about the smell of dead meat coming out of the fully opened fronted butcher’ shops!  

The Textile Co-operative

It is a shame I did not take a picture of the outside (this here is a scan from their leaflet). 

outside co op 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village
Outside of co-op in Beni Khiar

 There was a large wall at both side with some sort of mural showing the looms and materials… however it somehow was not as striking and did not stand out, hence missed (as being at the beginning of the village, I had gone by it in the taxi earlier on).  There were no gates, so I approached.  The ground was

June 2010 282 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village
Wool on roof drying, approaching textile co-op

June 2010 283 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village
orange trees in the garden approaching textile co-op in Beni Khiar

a garden full of orange and other citrus trees.  It reminded me of an old school in the 60′s – a bit decrepit - and I was expecting to be challenged any minute as a trespasser.  Instead, I reached a couple of buildings, one with a door opened and I approached tentatively (see picture above). Walking in I felt like an alien and also felt like stepping into a time machine, back in time.  Inside not many people, I asked if this was the co-op and a young-ish man came out of one of the rooms and – speaking part English and part French - we established I was in the right place.  Having asked if I could look around, my host asked why I wanted to see the place.  I told him the co-op was mentioned in my tourist guide and I was a tourist and interested, as I had come over specifically for this place.  I am sure him and the other men around thought I was mad! Anyway, he happily told me I could go and have a look upstairs and, when coming back down again, he would show me the warehouse (which turned out to be a small room downstairs).  I walked upstairs and I found myself in a large room (the whole length and width of the building) full of looms, 15-18 of them. 

June 2010 285 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Looms at the textile co-op

The old fashioned looms were fascinating.  In the room were … men working at their loom and weaving various types of cloths.  Some incredibly attractive to the eye (the

June 2010 2841 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Man at his loom

cloths not the men! icon biggrin Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village ).  Absolutely fascinating! Once again it was like stepping in the time machine and being back to the industrial revolution! How incredible to think that in this day and age people still make cloths in the old fashion way!!

June 2010 287 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village
Typical cloths used for local coats

Apparently the co-operative was set up in 1957 (as the leaflet I was later given told me).  The men at the looms were really friendly and not at all bothered by my being there, they kept on weaving and said ‘good morning’ as I was wondering. They were also kind enough to let me take pictures (a lot of people in the Muslim world believe having a picture taken deprives you of something [soul?]), this meant I was able to walk around taking picture and videos (see later) through the room.  At the end of the room, sitting on the floor was a very old man, he was working at a large sort of wheel – initially I thought it was a primitive fan!  Infact it was something completely different.

June 2010 289 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village
Wheel and wool reels

He had lots of small cones, no longer than 10-15 cm and hollow inside.  He put one on something pointed, sticking out of the wheel, he then wrang around it 4 different coloured threads – coming from wool cones sitting by his side – and with the help of the wheel/fan he spun the 4 threads together on the cone that was acting as a pipette.  I suppose he was creating a twisted thread that was then used on the looms to weave the cloths.  He seemed totally oblivious to me – or totally ignored me – I tried to film the whole scene… it is not the best as I was trying to be very inconspicuos.     

On another part of the room, behind some looms and weavers, there were more of these ‘wheels’ and another man doing the same thing. He was almost hidden away.

As I was walking back downstairs I saw one of these wheel closer and it was made of wood and what looked like some kind of skin tightly stretched around it. Very ingenous! 

 

xxxx

Downstairs, my ‘guide’ showed me the storeroom (rather than warehouse) as promised, which was full of types of materials, rugs, bed covers, satchels, cushions etc. 

traditional overcoat 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Traditional overcoat

satchels bags 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

satchels-bags

texiles 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village
Textiles

 

 

 

 

 

I would have loved to buy a bit of everything.  Some of the colours were very bright and fetching.  Because they were made of wool and linen, and bulky – the weight allowance on the plane – I was only able to buy three cushion covers (See our onlineshop).

Tunisian co op cushion blue 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Tunisian co-op cushion -blue

Tunisian co op cushion green 150x150 Looking for a textiles co operative in a Tunisian village

Tunisian co-op cushion - green

I do hope that I will be able to get more stock if there is request.  [I was told they do not have internet, so all communications need be done by mobile (hopefully) and snail mail] I’d love to be able to stock more of their products, they were lovely and some incredibly attractive!

I was told that the co-operative is mainly operated by men.  Men weave and use the looms.  Women work from home and – at my incredulous question of where the looms could fit in their small homes or did they have a small version of it - I was told the women cut, sew with colourful stitches and embroider creating the end products.  All their products are produced manually.


Posted in Blog, Customs, Life Style, Textile, Tunisia | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Marrakesh – walking and shopping in the Souks in the Medina

Last time I was staying in the Medina and decided to embrace the souks and getting to know them.  Walking through the souks, you often end up getting lost, however after a couple of days I managed to find my way around a bit and also found myself connecting the dots – so to speak – between different areas and finding myself unexpectedly close to ‘home’ or not a long way away.  What a sense of achievement, feeling you getting to grips with the city, you are starting to know it.  I love it! icon cool Marrakesh   walking and shopping in the Souks in the Medina Going back to your favourite shop or café/restaurant.  I tend to stay away from the big touristy restaurants.  And as I have allergies, and do not eat meat, it is rather restrictive where I eat.  Nevertheless I found some brilliant places to eat or take away food. 

I suppose when you first go though the souks they all seems very similar.  However once you get some firm points you can move from there.  You need to believe that all connects with each other and eventually you’ll get close or where you want to be.  It seems a nice, clear map of the souks is unobtainable.  Perhaps it is all part of the trick to let you get lost in them, like in our supermarkets where they change the shelves/food aisles layout to ‘encourage’ you to buy things you usually do not.  Same in Marrakesh, either that or to give work to the guides, official or not, who then get paid, therefore making it another way to boost the local economy.

The souks are a city within the city (or Medina).  They are named differently and the names are defined by the trade based in and around.  So you get the ‘babusher’ for the leather slippers and the one for the dyers, and so forth.  Which is kind of handy if you know what you want to buy and you can aim straight to that ‘quartier’ and have plenty to choose from.

It is harmless to go through the various alleys and street and squares. The trick is not to be lured into all the shops and only when you feel like it.

I often find the one that do not harass you and drag you in, are the best.  You need to follow your instinct and I found a lot of very nice people that have a love for what they sell and make.  I like mostly the artisans, not so much the shop keepers who are just trying to shift another item.

In all or the majority of the souks you find motorcycles speeding through despite the crowd.  There are also the occasional tricycle and lots of bicycles and carts.  The worse are the motorcycles as they produce huge amount of fumes, which I find pretty toxic when inhaled.  Not sure if this is due to the mix of petrol & oil they use – different from ours – and/or also to the large number of motorcycles in such confined and enclosed spaces that makes it for a not very nice air quality to breath in as well as having to be pretty much on the alert as they sprang out from nowhere behind you!

As I mentioned shopkeepers do their best to get you into their shop and buy.  They start the conversation with ‘bonjour, comment se va?’ (Good morning, how are you?) and it is handy if you know a few phrases of French to be able to reply.  Although my 20 year old ‘Moyen’ level French is now pretty rusty, I am told my pronunciation is good and it helps, I suppose, that I speak Italian.  However it makes it complicated as I need to translate from English to Italian, and then from Italian to French as most words and phrases are similar.  Nevertheless I often wished I could speak it better, especially when bartering so I have just bought online a refreshers course on CD to listen in the car, I reckon 30+ minutes a day, it will do the trick and put it in my ear and refresh both my vocabulary and phrases.  Will let you know.

Souks and sellers

Anyway, back to what we were discussing…  Marrakeshi souks sellers.  Even though I respond to the ‘Bonjour’ I often keep on going.  Some of the more pushy shopkeepers shout at you ‘just looking’ hoping, in so doing, to invite you in their shop… I think they do not fully understand the meaning of the phrase… do not let me put you off window shopping!  It is the best part.  You need to be firm if you do not want to buy.  They will trick you and kind of making you feel guilty.  Do not be fooled!  You don’t want to buy, you do not buy.  No matter how far in your negotiations you have gone, or how many bags, shoes, carpets, etc. they have got done the shelves.  Enjoy the experience.  I tend to ask prices first and also look at the quality.  Once I decide the shop I want to buy from I get in and chat with them.  One of the things that drives me mad in Morocco is when you ask about the price they reply to you with another question: ‘How many?’  Arggghhhh!  Even though it would make sense that the more you buy the better the price, many years ago I found it not necessarily true when I found myself in a small Moroccan town.  I wanted some of the lovely colourful typical bowls and set about asking prices.  It followed a sort of tag of war.  Finally I was given some prices, different colour had different prices.  So, as I was going about choosing some bowls, I was mentally adding up the price.  At the end I put them on the table and my idea was to bargain – as that is the norm – however the guy quoted me a price higher than what I had reached having used his prices – given to me a few minutes before – so I left without buying anything.  I found having a base price is essential, and then you can decide if you want more than one and so forth before starting haggling.

It is also the case of what you think it is worth it.  Last time I was in Marrakesh however I was ‘done’ on a small bottle of Sprite.  I asked for the price at a small bar/shop and was told 6 dirham.  Fair enough, I knew a similar size bottle of water was a little bit cheaper so I accepted the price in good faith, paid and left.  Once out of the shop I cleaned the top and side before opening it and ‘oh and behold’ there was a pre-printed price on the plastic bottle: 3.89 dirham!!  What could I do!?!  Annoying though.  I did not go back as I was a few paces away from the shop and had already opened it.  It wasn’t so much the money, really pennies, it was the principle!

Posted in Blog, General, Life Style, Morocco, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments

Nabeul market in Tunisia – a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries

Hammamet Market 150x150 Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries

Hammamet Market

Nabeul market 2 150x150 Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries

Nabeul market, a busy street

As well as the travel guides mentioning it, when you go to Nabeul market you realise how expensive it is & how rude the locals are if they don’t get their way.  Nabeul market is much larger than the Hammamet one – which I visited only a day before.    This also had given me an idea of prices and together with the one I had seen in a local supermarket just outside my hotel, I felt I was armed with knowledge and could easily compare prices and quality.  Buying and bartering at a Tunisian market is not as fun as doing it at a Moroccan one.  Tunisians seemed very rude and if you managed to agree a price, they became grumpy if they felt they hadn’t charged you way over the odds.  I drive prices down as much as possible, especially if I have seen it before at a lower price.  I also know that they won’t sell if it is not convenient to them and not making a profit.  I have a budget and stay within it.  Once the sale is done, I expect the other side to be pleased and not to hold a grudge.  As they had a choice and I did not force them to sell to me, I do not want them to try to make me feel guilty!  Having been several times before in Morocco and Turkey, I know that if they sell they make a profit, so cheer up Nabeulians!  Nevertheless even after having encountered some very rude and begrudging people, I still managed to meet great lovely ones. In particular at Nabeul market I met again an old man and his son (?) whom I had seen the day before in Hammamet market and I had purchased a few items of jewellery.  

June 2010 006 150x150 Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries

with Bourawi, market seller

I liked his jovial and welcoming (if a bit too overwhelming) approach.  It certainly made a stark contrast with the other local stall holders.   

This man (Bourawi) had developed an immediate crush for me (!) – he wanted to come back to England with me , which I drew a line to (it is very useful to have the use of a story involving ‘loving husband or partner’ that is working hard at home and waiting for you to get back or joining you in a day or two, if you do not happen to have the ‘real McCoy’!) - and so it was that he was the 1st to see me in Nabeul street market that Friday morning, while I was walking hot and confused by the number of people.  

Above the noise and hassling a friendly, welcoming voice rose and shouted: ‘Hallo my friend!!’ and I looked around to see a smiling face with open arms!  You cannot believe how nice it was, after having been shoved and pushed by greedy sellers and harassed by pushy ones, to see a familiar face.  He got me out of the crowd, offered a cool drink from a nearby stall seller and a seat!  Well, I supposed I felt like royalty! icon smile Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries
And you know, I bought a lot of lovely bits from him again, much more than the day before, as I had regretted not buying more of certain bracelets… It turned out my host was from Nabeul and had more of the stock I wanted and in different colours (see the Silver and Stone Berber bracelets – http://ow.ly/4s9Y8). 

B Bracelets 1 150x150 Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries
Silver & Stones Berber Bracelets -1
B Bracelets 2 150x150 Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries

Silver & Stones Berber Bracelets -2

I also bought two beautiful amber necklaces.  Gorgeous.  Did you know there is a way to show that amber is real amber?  Or camel bone is real camel bone/hoof and not just plastic, as sometimes it looks that way!  With Amber, you stroke it hard against a cloth so it warms up and when you smell it, it has a nice aroma, kind of resin.  In the case of the hoof/bones you use a flame to barely touch it and, it doesn’t melt as well as smelling amber but similar to when you burn your hair.   

amber necklace 150x150 Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries
Amber Necklace

 The way to usually do business in these countries is to sit and chat and sip a drink and bargain, and chat some more and then pick something else to add to the bargaining and you go on for a while.  At the end you are happy and so are they.  I love it when you find people like these, and hate it when I haven’t got scope to buy things from them, as they are so nice (like in the case of this guy – see photo below).  It is a process that takes time, however I love it, as you get to know a tiny bit of the other person and culture which is partly what is all about for me.

Nabeul potterer 150x150 Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries
Nabeul – potterer

At the end of my chatting/shopping/bargaining with my new friend I was also given a present of a Fatima hand pendant in silver and a very nice chain to go with it, which he asked his son to put on my neck; and a little stuffed camel key ring.  Such grace and nice people!  

As I finished with my friend, a few steps away, another from the Hammamet market crowd popped up – the one the day before had been a bit grumpy after the sale– and that day he was a bit more charming.  Again I bought two more bracelets from him (some I had really wanted the day before) and managed to get them for a very good price (http://ow.ly/4s9Y8).

camel and resin bracelet 150x150 Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries
Camel & Resin Bracelet

I wasn’t so lucky when I went back to a shop, just outside the market, where first thing in the morning I had seen some nice cushion covers and lovely decorated glasses to use for T-lights.  There was a woman setting up the shop, and having asked for the prices I had decided to pick up a few on my way back – did not want to carry them all the way through the market.  Unfortunately though, when I went back to the shop around mid-morning, the young son and dozy grandma where there instead and the son was much too greedy and quoted me a much, much higher price than the one quoted in the morning, and I didn’t manage to get him to see reason and sell me at his mom’s price.  I had proposed myself to go back there the following Friday, early in order to catch the woman while setting up the shop again.  However, the following week I also wanted to be in Hammamet and in the end decided I didn’t want to go from pillar to post (Nabeul and Hammamet are at opposite ends from where I was staying) and didn’t fancy rushing around on my last day of holiday.  So I went to the Hammamet medina instead and, eventually, managed to find a shop I had seen the first day of my holiday while wondering around.  Boy what a maze the medina is/was.  And when asking direction, ‘clever’ sellers thought they could confuse me and take me to their shops claiming to be the one I wanted… as if.  I had a picture on my mobile with the name on it … icon wink Nabeul market in Tunisia   a different way to shop and barter in foreign countries

Posted in Blog, Life Style, Tunisia | Tagged , , , , , | 8 Comments