Inspiration from world travels – Part 2

Inspiration from world travels – Part 2

Following on from my last post, this one continues with our travels, from Vietnam via The Mekong River into Cambodia. In all, it was four weeks of exploration – witnessing active community industries, whether on the waterside or further inland, to individuals hard at work to support their families.

Silk

Seri-culture

 

Twig bundles enclosing the caterpillars

 

Drawing the filaments from the cocoons

Spinners Plying the silk threads

 

Women doing Trad handloom weaving

 

silk fabric produced by Jacquard loom weaving

 

Jacquard weaving looms workshop

Having done much research, our own two weeks of solo exploration took us into rural Cambodia away from all the tourist routes and centres. From our last hotel (where we said goodbye to our group as they returned home), we undertook a tour roughly the shape of a question mark (north, then east, before turning south).

Coconuts

Throughout a very verdant Cambodia there are always coconut and banana palms to be seen. They are everywhere in every restaurant and every roadside stand. There are also large plantations of coconut and banana palms, casava, and trees for rubber tapping etc, even pepper! Oh, amongst other fruits, I mustn’t forget the smelly durian!

Whilst bananas are a more local commodity, we saw coconuts being transported further distances -shipped by boat along The Mekong and also by the truckload inland to be processed.

1 Coconut de-husking

 

2 Parts of the coconut

 

3 Coir and shipment

Rice

The growing of rice is everywhere and at our time of travel it was harvest time (3 per year). Every rural family grows some, and harvests it usually by hiring a harvesting crew with small machines. The families then dry the grain by spreading it out on plastic sheeting anywhere they have flat space….even on the roads! There was drying rice everywhere we explored.

Rice is a staple, as we all know, not only as a savoury carbohydrate, but as a grain it is used for so much more – puffed (who doesn’t know rice Krispies!), not to mention alcohol production (!), along with sweets, and more.

After harvesting rice is found drying everywhere even on the road

 

Making rice paper for sweets

 

Making rice Krispie sweets

 

If you're drinking to forget - please pay in advance sign

Inspiration was everywhere and we were often in total awe of our surroundings. But inspiration of a different sort….is that with limited resources, since the war, everything has multiple uses, there is little wastage.

‘Seeing’

I can only repeat what I said in Part 1 –

As this post is entitled ‘Inspiration’, and most reading this will be working with textiles, I have some thoughts on I how I see creative ideas everywhere in terms of shape, colour and design etc. These can be translated into – sewing, embroidery, landscape stitching, patchwork, felting, painting, weaving to name but a few.

 

Rectilinear v curvaceous

 

Organic

 

Patterns overhead

 

Rice-paper pattern

 

Finding patterns

 

Princely colours

 

Manipulation

 

The people are open, generous and friendly particularly once they have been greeted with the traditional greeting of ‘Susadei’ complete with praying hands and a nod of the head. During our solo explorations we were welcomed into fields to see ploughing, rice planting, salt production, lotus paddies and even into private homes.

Everyday life

 

 

Humble home

 

Wedding invite

 

Along the way we learned so very much….simplicity, humility, hard work, dedication, colour, pattern, and ingenuity are just a few key words that spring to mind. I’ve already been back home a couple of months, and this post has been a welcome and timely reminder of them.

Smiley faces

 

The key point of travel, whether in one’s own country or further afield, particularly for anyone creative, is to explore, to be open to everything around you and see….really ‘SEE’

I wish you many ‘seeing’ adventures in the future.

 

16 thoughts on “Inspiration from world travels – Part 2

  1. A wonderful post Antje showing a different, and it would seem satisfying, way of life.

    Many years ago I read a blog post by someone who was horrified that the silk she loved to use was made by boiling caterpillars alive. She didn’t investigate further to discover that the ‘meat’ was eaten. If she had she may have seen the process in a different light.
    The making of silk is fascinating.

    The coconut and rice production is amazing – can you imagine the reaction here if I spread my rice crop along the side of the A36 to dry ?

    Although scary to walk on, the strips of bamboo making a floor is a clever idea for ventilation. The houses may be basic but do you think there is a freedom in not having too much to worry about with regard to housework and decor?

    It’s a shame that sitting on the floor has mostly disappeared from our adult lives – maybe we would be a lot fitter if we had continued the practice 🙂

  2. Hi both. Yes, the whole silk production is fascinating and the manual skills/dexterity is something to be marvelled at. In our affluent culture we have lost so much having passed it all to machines! It is also seeing how they have little wastage and adapt things to new purposes, such as the bicycles. But then comes the question – when will they be fully ‘industrialised’? As it is at the moment, we could learn so much!

    The rice was drying on every available flat surface! The tarmac roads were ideal as they heat the rice from the underside too! Everyone just drives around the plastic sheeting!

    Roads have a very different status (at the moment!) – they are a space to be used ie the wedding marquees….I couldn’t see that happening here either. I also can’t imagine crossing the road here like one does there….you simply step out and walk, the traffic adjusts itself around you!

    Brilliant ventilation, but trusting that the bamboo supports one’s weight is mind challenging. Yes, existence is meagre for many, then suddenly in between the traditional houses you get a totally modern one….planning doesn’t seem to exist. I didn’t get into a modern one, so I wonder if they have more ‘stuff’.

    It was definitely the experience of a life time.
    X

  3. We did a similar trip along the Mekong last year. The people are a delight – were you introduced to Happy Places? Our guides asked us along the way ‘does anyone want a Happy Place?’. They meant a loo. When asked they said ‘when you want one you are worried – when you find one you are happy. So – Happy Place’. We thought this a charming take on western humour!

    1. Yes the people are delightful and having done the Mekong you will understand much of what we have experienced. Getting into the rural depths of the country was so different….some people were even mesmerised by our presence!

      I’d forgotten about ‘Happy place’ ….it certainly sums it up when travelling 😜 thanks for the reminder.

  4. The silk manufacture is absolutely fascinating Antje. I spent ages gazing at your pictures and still have lots of questions about things that I could see in and around the “main attraction”. I have to say that I too am not happy about boiling the silk worms alive, even if they are subsequently eaten. I can’t bear the thought of eating something that’s been cooked alive – which is why I won’t touch shell fish and crustations (and the thought of live scallops being dug out of their shells appals me) Sorry I’m off my soapbox now.
    I found the coconut harvest interesting too. When I was a child we had a fruit bowl which was made of a double coconut husk, minus the coir. Most unusual or so I thought.
    I think my mind doesn’t work like yours, or I haven’t had the art education, because I couldn’t see inspiration in many of the images that sparked your interest. I am obviously missing out on a lot. I will in any case keep going back over your two posts about your trip as I expect that closer examination will get through to me in the end.
    I’m looking forward to seeing what you are inspired to produce.
    Ann

    1. Ann, the silk production and weaving is totally fascinating and I was totally enthralled to the extent they were dragging me away!

      And the coconuts are quite bountiful both in culture, they are everywhere, but also in what they can provide….dried flowers, coir, husks used for stoking fires, coconut meat and obviously coconut juice and finally the shells being used creatively.

      If only you were on my doorstep….I would love to chat with you about ‘seeing’ inspiration. I always told my students – learning about design was like stirring a muddy pond, but that it would suddenly clear. One day a student came in all excited….she had nearly crashed her car! The reason….she had seen a lone tree in a field and was fascinated by its shape and colour against its backdrop! So fascinated she hadn’t notice the stationary traffic in front! Another said to me that she couldn’t use a certain fabric in her work….’because’….and explained why.
      My only thought each and every time this happened was….I’ve got ya – to SEE 🤪

    2. I definitely need a tutor because I obviously need to LEARN to see. I did for a while see pattern in different close-up “things” after attending a textile design course but couldn’t find a way of using the patterns in my felting. Now I’ve gone back to the Big Picture and am mainly sticking to landscapes, especially with trees. I didn’t do “art” after the age of 12 at school. I wasn’t allowed to, I had to do Needlework and Cooking! I really think I missed a trick there.
      Ann

  5. Simply a delight Antje. Your section on silk production brought me back to travelling in China pre-1989 (Tiananmen). The no waste policy is something the west can learn from (as you might say, it would involve society as a whole ‘seeing’ this as a need.
    Looking at the coconut preparation, I can see health and safety don’t seem to be too high on anyone’s agenda 😉
    I’m tickled pink as the rice drying on the side of the road.
    There are so many possibilities with design from your photos – I bet you are biting at the bit to work with them when the time is right!
    Helene x

    1. We could discuss and reminisce for hours re silk and learning about no wastage. But you are so correct about health and safety, by our standards and we thought about it a great deal. It certainly made us think that we have maybe now gone overboard with our H&S to the extent that it has become stifling!

      Having so many ideas buzzing around my little grey cells is quite challenging….one day.
      Xx

  6. Amazing post Antje, what an enjoyable trip you had. The silk journey is fascinating. I must say that I did not know, or chose to ignore the fate of the caterpillar when the silk cocoon achieved the size required. Wonderful photos illustrating the processes involved.
    I loved seeing all your photos, definitely an inspiration, and wonderful to spend a lot of time examining them all in detail.

    1. Thank you Marie.
      Yes, as many say it is sad about the caterpillars, but there are others that say harvesting plant fibres hurts the plants! The gain with either of these is that they are natural and so much better than ‘plastic’ alternatives….of which I am as guilty as the next 😥

      I’m glad you liked the photos….choosing which ones to share was quite a challenge as I took soooo many!

  7. Gorgeous post, Antje. You certainly made the most of your travels and thank you for sharing some of it with us. I particularly enjoy seeing how you extrapolate design ideas from colours, structures and so on. It’s an interesting glimpse into how your mind works. It will be wonderful to see how you develop some of these ideas when they have simmered a little and you have the time / opportunity to work on them. I’m looking forward to it!

    1. Thank you Lindsay. Wow glimpsing into my mind….mmmm! Quite a messy, chaotic thought filled and often befuddled place 🤪

      My little grey cells definitely work like a percolator, so ‘simmering’ is a fair description and I too will be fascinated to see what might eventually materialise. X

  8. Thanks for another wonderful post about your travels. I, too, love seeing what design ideas are percolating and look forward to the results. It is good to see a society that is based on using everything carefully and that isn’t so invested in “what’s in it for me”. I do think that Western society has lost flexibility, both in their bodies and their thinking. Ah well, a discussion for another day.

  9. Thanks Ruth. Sadly, I don’t think our Western culture will learn until those with a learned voice can engage the ‘mighty powerhouses’….but, as you say, that’s a whole other conversation.

    I will keep my design thoughts tucked away for now, hopefully they will find an appropriate outlet at some point. X

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