DEAR READER

Discoholic 🪩

JBB: An Artblog!
cherry valley forever
ojovivo
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
we're not kids anymore.
AnasAbdin
Cosmic Funnies
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
KIROKAZE
almost home

Origami Around

No title available
dirt enthusiast
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

Janaina Medeiros
styofa doing anything
Sweet Seals For You, Always

Kaledo Art
seen from United States
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seen from Singapore
seen from United States
seen from United States
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seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from South Korea
seen from Australia

seen from Singapore
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seen from Germany

seen from Australia

seen from China
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seen from Malaysia
@farsailing
source? it was revealed during my nature walk.
citing the muddy sprites that live in the riverbed et al.
Look at how beautiful my wetland is!! The woods surrounding the water were also stunning, but I didn’t get photos today.
The irises and ferns are out in full force as the trilliums fade away. The jewelweed is starting to grow and the berry brambles are putting out their first flowers, so next month I should have leaves and flowers for a bug balm and berries to snack on.
Should also have some strawberries for my best friend and the dogs later this week, they’re starting to ripen on the little beach by the other wetland near me
I’m happy that my fiance and I are in a position where we can buy a house in the next year or two and I’m excited to move out of the burbs (either to a more urban neighborhood or out in the boonies), but I’m really going to miss the natural areas here and the relationship I have with them. I know I’ll make new relationships wherever we move to, but there’s something special about knowing where everything is, even under a meter of snow. About knowing exactly where the best ramp patches are, which raspberry brambles produce the most, when to collect the sumac fruits and saskatoon berries, and where the ducks like to rest among the irises
90 days until my wedding 🥰
“The sea was pregnant of Aphrodite from the Sky. But what sort of pregnancy it was, secret accounts of it oblige us to keep it secret. But finally the goddess had to be born. As soon, the sea stopped and calmed down, swelling in mild waves at the place of the birth.”
— Photius (9th c. CE) quoting Himerios (4th c. CE), translated by Jacqueline Karageorghis (20th c. CE)
i hate that concerns about urban gardening/foraging safety is often met with "What are you, a cop?" scorn. I believe it's a suspicion of anything that hinders the punk/anti-system urgency to jump in immediately and do whatever feels right.
Safety, ethics, and sustainability are all a part of urban gardening and foraging. I'm sorry that means you need to do homework before you can do anything, I know that sounds lame. But life is complicated.
I know anti-intellectualism is viewed as activist these days, but like, surely you don't want to literally eat lead, right?
Let’s check in and see how those rascally solarpunk kids are doing, surely they’ve learned by now that…..
Daily reminder: Leafy greens like kales uptake all those delicious heavy metals in urban soils like lead and cadmium.
Don’t eat sidewalk-crack kale.
Here's some cool references from the EPA on safe urban gardening:
REUSING POTENTIALLY CONTAMINATED LANDSCAPES: Growing Gardens in Urban Soils
Steps to Creating a Community Garden or Expand Urban Agriculture at a Brownfields Site
If you live in the states, your state university extension likely does soil testing! Just google “[state] extension soil testing]”
Ex: If you’re from PA, Penn State runs soil testing
Vermont’s is through UVM
and here’s Florida’s
We need only to recognize God intimately present with us and address ourselves to Him every moment.
From Brother Lawrence's The Practice of the Presence of God
i recommend telling yourself “this isn’t an experience i want to keep having” and stop entertaining things that are really detrimental to your health and don’t benefit you in anyway.
Toy from Ancient Greece, c.450 BCE: this doll was crafted in the form of a woman with a rolling pin, and it has articulated joints that allow the rolling pin to be moved back and forth
This terracotta figurine was created nearly 2,500 years ago, and it was likely designed as a toy. The doll is positioned above a small tray, and its torso is equipped with a set of pins (located in the waist and shoulders) that allow the figure to lean up and down, gently pushing the rolling pin back and forth across the tray as if preparing food.
Above: another view of the same doll
This is not the only known example of an articulated doll from ancient Greece. Many so-called "dancing dolls" (also known as plangones) were created throughout the Greco-Roman world.
Above: bone figurine with articulated limbs, from ancient Greece, c.350-250 BCE
As this book explains:
Female dolls with attached limbs known as plangones, korai, or nymphai were made in numerous areas in Greece over a considerable span of time from the Geometric to the Hellenistic periods. Male dolls also exist but were far less popular. Although made out of a wide range of materials, including wood, bone, ivory, marble, wax, cloth, and alabaster, dolls of terracotta are by far the most common.
The same book goes on to describe some of the other toys that were created and used by the ancient Greeks:
In antiquity, play was as much an integral part of growing up as it is today, and the ancient Greeks possessed a wide variety of toys and games. Both the archaeological record and ancient literature provide information about these, only some of which overlaps. The most common toys preserved include rattles, dolls, knucklebones, figurines, miniature vessels, miniature furniture, and miniature animals, some of which are wheeled and some of which have riders. Less common are balls and wheeled carts.
Ancient toys have been unearthed in many other parts of the world, too.
Above: a wheeled horse from Roman Egypt, c.50-250 CE
Some of the rattles, pull-toys, articulated dolls, and mechanical figurines from Mesopotamia and Egypt even date back to nearly 4,000 years ago.
Above: a mechanical dog figurine from Egypt, c.1390-1352 BCE, with a lever that opens and closes the dog's mouth
In one of my previous posts, I also mentioned a 3,500-year-old wheeled hedgehog figurine from Iran that may have been created and used as a toy.
Above: wheeled hedgehog from Susa, in modern-day Iran, c.1500-1100 BCE
Sources & More Info:
British Museum: Toy
Coming of Age in Ancient Greece: Images of Childhood from the Classical Past: Jointed Dolls and Play
American Journal of Archaeology: Jointed Dolls in Antiquity
University of Friboug: From Greece to Rome: Toys for Growing Up? (PDF in French)
Metropolitan Museum of Art: Bone Figurine with Articulated Limbs
British Museum: Wheeled Horse
Metropolitan Museum of Art: Mechanical Dog
The Louvre: Hedgehog Toy from Susa
Cambridge University Press: Ritual, Play, and Belief in Evolution and Early Human Societies
Thinking about how wild it is that enshittification starts as a way for the rich to squeeze the populace for more money but ends up infecting everything so even luxury products decline in quality. They’ve got more money than fucking God now and for what? Literally they can’t even buy fun nice stuff for themselves because they killed craft.
Anyway this post is about Dhaka muslin but it’s also about everything.
Nearly 200 years ago, Dhaka muslin was the most valuable fabric on the planet. Then it was lost altogether. How did this happen? And can we
guess it's time to post agha shahid ali's poem about dhaka muslin
Fun fact! Revival of Dhaka Muslin has been ongoing for quite some time. The headline of the above article is very very misleading, we know exactly how Dhaka Muslin was made. The process was very well documented. We know how it was made, but colonialism ruined the fabric's production area and devalued the skills needed to make it such that they no longer existed. But the process itself was not lost.
That being said, efforts to bring it back are underway, and they have been making amazing progress, and succeed in creating Dhaka Muslin yet again.
It all began with a search for ‘phuti karpas’ – muslin’s unique cotton plant which is known to have become extinct. However, starting in 201
This is a pretty good updated article, it has a lot of the same info as the BCC one (which also discusses some of the revival efforts) but with more of a focus on that process, an update to the story, and it details some of the other ongoing projects working on the revival!
Here's the first weaver to manage to produce a finished piece in nearly 200 years, Al Amin.
His first piece was 300 threads, according to the article they have now been able to get into the 700s for thread counts, which is absolutely incredible.
Several projects are actually underway now each with different weavers and slightly different methods, producing fabric intended to meet or best the original!
And if you're curious, "okay but can it pass through a ring" yes! Yes they can!
All three of these photos are of pieces made in the modern century, photos by Wasiul Bahar!
It's a very time consuming process, and a very expensive fabric to purchase, but love and passion for it have been steadily bringing it back!
Great Egret dancing, Hungary. Photo by Bence Máté
getting my immigration medical exam today!! praying to loud-thundering Zeus that my PR approval follows swiftly 🙏
The beauty of death and changing seasons 🍂
feeling the gods in my life is feeling freedom it's feeling joy it's the warmth of the sun it's the laughter on the tip of my tongue it's wanting to live again to live for them and honor them and honor me and just be alive
been getting out of habit with my usual woods walks because of how cold and snowy it’s been (160cm of snow since November and multiple days at or below -20C)
but I think on my days off this week I’m going to take our older dog out to collect needles for pine soda and maybe get him to pull me on the sled if we get some fresh snow
[My modest collection of Homer translations; Wilson’s Odyssey is second from right.] Emily Wilson is the second woman to translate the Iliad
People have been very mean to Emily Wilson online lately. I’ve been on record as saying her translation of the Odyssey (or Iliad) wasn’t my favourite, but do I agree with the accusations of oversimplification or inaccuracy? (Spoiler alert: no.)