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Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2008 7:10 pm
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Posted: Tue Aug 26, 2008 9:22 pm
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I can't say I've made many sacred things in my life, let alone by hand; but I have to admit I find the process beautiful and that depending on what exactly you're making, a great deal of emotion and time goes into it, as well as personalization. Your sweat and if you're not careful, blood will go into it to make it sacred, to make it have a personal connection to you. Mass production, I feel looses that touch. It isn't a personal matter anymore, as it should be. It is refined and polished and made perfect. And they all look alike. That is something that when you make an item yourself that will never happen. Solider-like uniformity is next to impossible to have in your personal collection and something, I feel, you shouldn't have. It makes it just a mere "pretty thing" then, it isn't personal to you anymore.
My mother used to hand make my clothes when I was growing up. I was raised Catholic (till the age of ten), and as a result had my First Communion. The dress my mother made for me for the event took six months to make, as she embroidered most of the designs on the fabric individually. The dress was worn by me and my two younger sisters when they took their Communion. It was however, lost about a year ago when I left my parent's home.
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 6:13 am
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 7:12 am
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I make the majority of what I need, these days. Bear in mind I also 'work from home' with my jewelry website, and otherwise have the time to devote to my pursuits.
I don't like seeing old arts die out. I think that's something I inherited with my upbringing - my grandfather was a traditional artist who carved decoys for a living. All of his children practice some sort of craft or art, and were raised in the country and on the country. I know my mother passed that along to us, at least. I feel blessed by my upbringing, knowing that it's not all that common now, with populations largely accumulating in urban centres.
That being said, there's plenty of mass produced things I use when I'm creating something. I try, most of the time, to make it all myself, or include other people's handicraft if I can't...but sometimes there's no way around using something made commercially. I like to buy local. I like to buy Canadian, at the very least. I try to buy things made with quality, and not at the exploitation of others.
But for the most part, I make what I need, and what my coven might need. I have the time, and the skills, and I willingly sacrifice that and the energy required. to create items and tools with quality and connection.
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 8:27 am
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 8:49 am
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All of the objects that I could have made myself I have bought from a store. The bowls I use in offerings, the incense holder, etc. are things I could make myself given the resources, the ability, and the time. At the moment, though, it's the best I've got, and will have to suffice until such a time where I might craft these items myself.
Hand-made is always going to have more personal value, excepting perhaps an item given as a gift, and I would think they are "better" in this sense. When I was younger, my father "lent" me a Catholic rosary made of plastic, and it felt cheap. The personal attachment (had there been any) could have outweighed that, but it's how it always felt to me. Mass produced items can feel soulless, which seems at odds with their use in this regard.
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 8:49 am
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 9:03 am
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 11:41 am
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 1:03 pm
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 3:28 pm
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 3:36 pm
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Posted: Wed Aug 27, 2008 5:35 pm
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SpaceTerminal Destiny Hand-drawn divination cards are hell to make, so to speak. I found the ones I made 3 years ago yesterday and I promptly threw them in the recycling because they were so badly drawn and half of them weren't even finished. That's too bad. I would have loved to have seen them.
Myself, I'm working on my own deck. I have carved the block to print the back, and I have about a quarter of the fronts finished.
Morgandria Oh man...everytime I see one those wooden binders as a "book of shadows" I shudder. Mostly because I'm a handmaiden - it's our responsibility to hold up the book in ritual and carry them around, usually with one arm, and a candle in the other. Our really big books weigh a ton as it is - just a leatherbound sketchbook idea our high priestess lovingly refers to as "maidenkillers". I cannot imagine how much weight having a wooden cover would add. gonk Mind you, if you're not carrying the thing around in ritual one-handed, you probably don't care how much it weighs! xp Sometimes you can buy 1/8th inch thick hardwood that make for lovely covers without adding a whole lot of weight.
I like your High Priestess' sense of humor though. twisted
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Posted: Thu Aug 28, 2008 9:07 am
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TeaDidikai SpaceTerminal Destiny Hand-drawn divination cards are hell to make, so to speak. I found the ones I made 3 years ago yesterday and I promptly threw them in the recycling because they were so badly drawn and half of them weren't even finished. That's too bad. I would have loved to have seen them. Myself, I'm working on my own deck. I have carved the block to print the back, and I have about a quarter of the fronts finished.
No you wouldn't. While that was also my stage of time where I was exploring other religions the most, that I was also the time when I was the most fluffiest. It make sme shudder and that deck of cards reflected that fluffiness.
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Posted: Thu Aug 28, 2008 9:43 am
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SpaceTerminal Destiny TeaDidikai SpaceTerminal Destiny Hand-drawn divination cards are hell to make, so to speak. I found the ones I made 3 years ago yesterday and I promptly threw them in the recycling because they were so badly drawn and half of them weren't even finished. That's too bad. I would have loved to have seen them. Myself, I'm working on my own deck. I have carved the block to print the back, and I have about a quarter of the fronts finished. No you wouldn't. While that was also my stage of time where I was exploring other religions the most, that I was also the time when I was the most fluffiest. It make sme shudder and that deck of cards reflected that fluffiness. I really would have actually. Sometimes it is neat to reflect upon how much you've grown.
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