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Kumbeshwar Technical School Carpets

Through People Tree I was introduced to the really excellent Kumbeshwar Technical School I posted about them a little earlier here. Like Mahaguthi they support and train lower caste women and also men. They also support a large school of 260 and an orphanage of 19 children. I have been having exhibitions of my digital illustration work from time to time, i have been converting the files to screens and screen printing them or simply printing them digitally.
I saw the opportunity to collaborate with KTS. They make these amazing natural hand-spun Tibetan wool carpets. The carpet making process is quite similar to the pixel make up of digital images so as many of my images are quite flat with few colours so I had the idea of producing some of my designs as carpets. Together with Satyendra and the design team we found a way to covert digital images directly to carpet graphs which will hopefully make the design process a little easier.
Im really excited about the possibilites with designing carpets though, could be great.

UPDATE.....................................
I have just set up a new website for these carpets
to view and order please take a look at

 

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Technical training for the adults. KTS have a facility to produce knitware, carpets and also furniture, and they provide training to their workers

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From their profits they also fund a school of 260...

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...and an orphanage of 19 children

 

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The first test grid i made digitally (i managed to mess up and specify C31 (beige) instead of C30 (black).... Chris you idiot!!!!

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it worked ok though!

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some details in production

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and some designs ......more to come

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I will post more about this soon when the first batch of carpets comes through.
If you want to order or enquire about a carpet please mail me .....chris (at) vegetablefriedrice (dot) com

 

Filed under  //   fair trade   nepal   rug   social justice   sustainability  

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kumbeshwar technical school

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I met up with the excellent Kumbeshwar Technical School here in Nepal, from their fair trade profits they run a school for 260 children as well as an orphanage for 19 children. They also train and run literacy courses for their workers.
I went down to visit them for fair trade day (a week late because of the week long Maoist strike here in May)
 
For fair trade day KTS hired doctors/nurses/dentists for a free health check for the children, the workers as well as local people and children who are not in the school.
They also had a 'meet up' day for their knitters. The knitting that KTS produce is done by the women at home in the villages so that they can can be flexible and remain with their children, so several times a year they meet up to share skills and get technical feedback. Each of the knitters knitted one patch of their own design and the whole lot was sewn together to make a pair of gloves. The gloves are sent to People Tree who may incorporate some of the patterns into their knitware and reward the knitter's own designs.
 
 
You can read more about them and if you look at the rest of the site see (and order) some of the beautiful knitware products they make here
I am getting some carpets made at KTS .....will post something about that soon
 

Filed under  //   fair trade   kumbeshwar technical school   people tree   social justice  

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Prof. Anil Gupta's Shodh Yatra in Assam

'The minds in the margins are not marginal minds'

I had heard about the fantastic work of Prof. Anil Gupta two years ago while teaching at Sristi College in Bangalore.

Professor Gupta's interest is in sustainable technologies and remedies found in India's rural fringes. Traditional technologies such as herbal remedies and other traditional and localised knowledge are facing a decline as these areas adapt to the globalised world. Local knowledge is often under-appreciated in these areas as they strive to modernise. The aim of the Prof Gupta and his team is to record and foster this knowledge so that it is not lost and can perhaps be utilised in new ways.
In addition to this work Gupta and his team are also documenting some incredible new innovations by the local communities they visit. Most of the communities visited by the team are subsistence farmers and use their limited resources in very inventive ways. Without anything other than the resources that grow naturally around them these farmers are living within entirely sustainable systems. There are some really interesting ideas for the developed world.

THE SHODH YATRA

Dr. Gupta had the idea of connecting and learning from these communities 12 years ago. He and his team tried to think of the best way to visit the isolated communities. In the end they decided the only way these places could be visited was by foot, the communities are so isolated that many do not have access by road, also these group walks of learning are deeply rooted in the Indian tradition which Gandhi had tapped into as his way of gathering support and connecting peoples. The Shodh Yatra was born, in Hindi it means literally 'foot travel' The first Shodh Yatra was in Gupta's own state of Gujarat and since there has been a Shodh Yatra every six months. 24 in all so far in almost every region in India. On average 300 people, mainly farmers and academics but also a passionate and extremely diverse bunch of interested individuals from botanists to product designers from all over india and beyond come to each Yatra. Amongst the amazing people we met on the Assam Yatra were journalists, zoologists, architects, anthropologists and a really interesting amateur botanist.

 

Prof Gupta has set up the Honeybee Network, the idea is to 'cross pollinate' isolated communities with the other knowledge systems and innovations of their neighbours. He has collected so many innovations in the past twelve years that their database actually holds the largest amount of registered patents in the developing world. The idea is to use these innovations in a completely open source or creative commons way.
He has also set up the Grassroots to Global network to create business plans for the local amateur innovators to reach a global audience.
We joined the Yatra at the Rural Volunteer Centre outside Dhemaji in northwest Assam. The RVC was set up by Ravindranath as an NGO to provide knowledge and training to local farmers.
There is also a good article about Dr Guptas work in DESIGN OBSERVER here

I hope i can someday do some work for Dr Gupta. Very inspiring stuff.
 
  
 

 
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professor gupta gives a talk at one of the villages
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myself and some of the local kids 
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banana tree plates
 
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asking the locals about their uses of local herbs
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ravindranath from the RVC
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one of the schools we all stayed at. 

 

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The Yatra crosses one of many rivers

 

 

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Thatching a roof outside Dhemaji

 

 

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An amazing village welcome

 

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Giving a talk in one of the villages

Filed under  //   fair trade   india   social justice   sustainability  

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