Apparel, Accessories and Decorative Items

GhanArts offers you a visit backstage, in our Accra workshop: ideas we come up with, what inspires us, samples that will, or will not, make it to our range of products. Please feel free to comment, and visit www.ghanarts.com for international orders. If you see something here that is not on the www.ghanarts.com website, drop us a line! we will be happy to give you a quote for a one-of-its-kind item.

Sunday, 6 November 2011

From birdhouses to birds...

It all began with an artist friend of mine (who works mostly with clay and wood) who was asked to produce his own idea of a birdhouse. For some reason I can't even begin to explain, what came to my mind immediately was a northern Cameroon Mousgoum "beehive" mud hut, or tolek.


Not really thinking about his rendition of a birdhouse anymore (which was actually all that mattered in the real world of commissioning, designing, producing and delivering), I started musing about the kind of birds that would visit such an unusual structure as a 'tropical' birdhouse. They, of course, would be colourful, to set off against a clay background. Hey, I suddenly thought, birds might just be another use for all the off-cuts remaining from my sewing activities!

I remembered seeing fabric birds on the Internet. Beautiful. But come on, (1) copying is not creating, and (2) I live in an "exotic" country, and the birds I could see with my no less exotic mind's eye were bright parrots, not tame, reasonably proportioned little birds. My birds would therefore have strong bills, a distinctive egret and an exaggerated long tail. Translating my idea into something reflecting the balance I wanted was a bit tricky.


My friend (of birdhouse fame) liked my colourful birds so much that... He decided he wanted butterflies too (I've never heard of butterfly-houses, have you?). Well, everything in its own good time. Butterflies will be the topic of another post.

And what about the birdhouse itself?

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