Tuesday, October 7, 2014

War and Remembrance



Veteran's Day/Armistice Day/Remembrance Day is a little over a month away. Helen never gave it a second thought until one of her cousins, who spent some childhood years in Europe and visited there as an adult, suggested that she make a remembrance poppy lapel flower. These are a frequent accessory in the UK and a few other places, it turns out, at this time of year. A little Internet research revealed that this bright red poppy, Papaver rhoeas or the Flanders poppy, grows readily on disturbed earth, and the battlefields of Europe during World War I provided plenty of that.

So, here is Helen's kanzashi version of the remembrance poppy....


Silk charmeuse flower, dupioni silk leaves, Swarovski crystal center anchored by a glass seed bead. Buy it here .

Sunday, September 28, 2014

Wired Kanzashi Flower Centers



OK you guys, Helen promised a tutorial, and she is delivering! Finally. Have you ever had some small beads that matched your kanzashi flower really well, but you didn't want to use them, because they wouldn't cover up the raw edges of the center well enough? No? Well it could happen, and here's what you can do about it.

This is Helen's New Technique, and it occurred to her while she was doing God-knows-what, but it's pretty easy. Here's what you do.....for a small flower, wire together 3 beads, like this....


If you want, you can have the wire crossing over the beads.....will show examples of this later. Anyhoo, leave a length of wire behind it, OK? Now, just insert your contraption into the small hole in the center of your flower....


Sorry about the crappy photo quality. We were using a fluorescent light, and it's hard to photograph purple properly with Helen's camera! Here's another photo to show you what we're doing....


So, insert the wire all the way into the flower, making sure the beads are as centered as possible. Cut the ends short enough to fold them onto the back of the flower, like this.....


Now, make a backing of some sort to glue over the wire ends, sealing them in place....


And here's the flower; silk with lepidolite beads.....


Easy, huh? Now, here are two other examples of the same technique. The first is a batik cotton with amethyst beads.....


See how the wire crosses over the beads, sort of? And here's a very similar one, another batik cotton with sodalite beads.....


And that's Helen's latest contribution to the art of kanzashi! You're welcome. Now, go try it.

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Mor Nu Thingz



Helen's summer was packed with new kanzashi, and she is glad to have had the opportunity to make so many new things! One thing she forgot to tell me about in time for the last post was a little collaboration she did with her friend Lannette. Lannette designs mostly bridal gowns in Southern California, and she creates flower girl dresses, too. She sent Helen some lovely plum, lavender and ivory satins, and asked for flowers for the dress's sash and a complementary hair clip. Here's what Helen came up with....


....and here's the dress!!! So pretty....


What else? A new chirimen silk necklace, (buy it here)....


Next, new lapel flowers! Helen has been posting these on the Instagrams, and has been getting a good deal of approval from men's fashion retailers and bloggers. Seriously! Here's a plaid dupioni silk one with a goldstone bead (buy it here)


....and an ume-shaped vintage kimono silk with a faux pearl here.....


.....a red and gold Chinese silk brocade lapel flower that Helen's friend Valerie bought on Etsy.....


....this fall colors linen one here.....


... this red chirimen silk flower here


and a black tie silk one that I can't figure out how to show you, but you can see it here.

Now, Helen has two things to announce. First, she is partnering with a friend who is a marketing professional, to sell most of her new flower lapel pins on her friend's website (yay)! They have just barely started this process, so I won't send you to any links yet, because there's nothing online to see at this moment. Helen is just thrilled that she has the support of a knowledgeable (and impressive!) person to sell these things, because selling is the Supreme Challenge, and Helen is an orchestra musician, so who do you think has the better chance of marketing this stuff successfully? More when we have something to show you!

The next thing is that Helen figured out a New Thing for kanzashi flower centers, and she is going to do a tutorial for me to post soon. She promises.

Monday, August 4, 2014

Nu Thingz



Helen has had a flurry of creative activity this summer, because she suddenly had a flood of ideas for kanzashi flower lapel pins. All those darker and understated kimono remnants and silk tie remnants sitting around that are too somber for women's hair accessories are perfect for men's lapel flowers! Eureka. Here are a few that are in her Etsy shop:

Well, this one's not dark, but it is an improvement on the nanohana flower that Helen made for her friend's birthday (see previous post). This nanohana boutonniere is vintage kimono silk with a silk crepe leaf and a freshwater pearl.....


Buy it here ....next is a slate-blue single hydrangea blossom made from silk crepe and a tiny sodalite bead that Helen managed to sew right in the center of the flower (applause)....



Purchase here ....Here's a dark daisy made from a rich yet understated silk brocade......


Find it here .....Here's another hydrangea, a lavender one this time, with a freshwater pearl center....


Buy it here.....Here's another silk brocade number.....Helen has used this fabric a number of times for women's accessories, and came to the last little remnant with this lapel flower, so it's a one-of-a-kind.....rough-hewn manly-looking coin pearl in the center....




Can be found here . OK, and the last one for right now is already spoken for, but don't worry, Helen will make another one! This one is from a vintage kimono silk that we just love, but just didn't ever work as a women's accessory of any sort....


Much more to come! Helen has always been enamored of miniatures, and this lapel flower business is right where she likes to be. 

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Kanzashi Boutonnieres



So, hope you are having an enjoyable summer. We've been busy tying up loose ends. Helen is frazzled, for some reason, feels like she can't catch up. She hauled me into the vet's office the other day. They poked me with all sorts of things. Seems like Helen is the one who could use some medical attention.

Anyway, I'm going to talk about something new for kanzashi today. I mentioned in an earlier post that a guy in New York contacted Helen, asking for a teeny little flower to be used as a lapel pin. It took 2 months to come up with a prototype, and I'm still not allowed to show it to you, but it opened the door to a whole new category of kanzashi for Helen to make: les boutonnieres. Here are a few things that Helen has made as gifts. First, a little nanohana flower as a birthday present for one of her friends, made from vintage kimono silk and a coin pearl.....


.....and some dupioni silk roses....


These flowers are each about 1.5 inches in diameter, so quite small. So, that's actually it for the lapel pins for right now. Next are some new things that Helen is giving her friend Denise to sell at her hair salon. Here's a new ponytail flower made from 3 different batik cottons.....


....and some new necklaces, like this one from silk satin organza....

......BTW, that stuff is really hard to work with. Next, a necklace from chirimen silk and pink jade......


......here's a pendant from three different colors of  dupioni silk.....


......a little number from two different silks with a linen twist in the center......


......and an older one from a synthetic fabric, with tulle and a freshwater pearl....


Finally, an item that Helen will has just posted in her Etsy shop: a pair of soft grey-ish lavender silk organza bobby pins....

 
Buy 'em here.
 
So, that's the new-ish stuff for the moment. Helen is excited to have a bunch of new fabric to play with, so there should be new designs over the course of the summer. Will report back when there's more!



Monday, June 16, 2014

Kanzashi Bracelet, Part Six



Good heavens, how could 2 months go by with no blog post? I guess we've been pretty distracted. Ten thousand apologies.

Helen is finally starting to get the hang of this kanzashi cuff bracelet business. It has certainly taken long enough. As with many things in kanzashi making, it's a matter of thinking through the geometry.

So, here's the latest bridal cuff bracelet. This one ties on the underside with a ribbon, so that it can fit on almost everyone. It's made from shantung silk that Helen got from her friend Lannette , and it's quite an elegant leaf design...


It actually fits a little loosely on our bracelet model, but it still pretty much stays put. So, here is the whole thing spread out.....


.....the underside sealed up with a ribbon......


.....optional flower that you can custom order if you want.....


....and the underside on our other bracelet model......


....and you can buy it here.

There are many more possibilities for bracelets and necklaces, we have come to realize. Stay tuned! I hope to post more of this sort of thing, and in sooner than two months, too.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Kanzashi Chrysanthemums



So sorry it has been such a long time since I have posted (again!.....what's with that?)! Helen has had a lot of heavy lifting at work, and I've been sleepy, but I've also been practicing bottle cap hockey....you can see in the photo that I am absolutely dominating my game! Anyway, Helen made a couple of new chrysanthemum shaped flowers, and I thought I would write an article about it. I know, I know, it is NOT chrysanthemum season!

Helen's chrysanthemums are somewhat less formal than the ones that other kanzashi artists have been
making. In a way, they're really not true kiku chrysanthemums at all, but just large pointy flowers with something convenient in the middle. Such a sellout. Most chrysanthemum kanzashi will have several layers of these pointy petals. Here are some REAL kiku.


First, a Kanzashi Temple piece, large, dark, mysterious, and complex....

  


....and next, a simple and elegant snap clip by Wisteria Gardens ....



Next we have a brilliant and flashy piece by KatyaFantasy ......




.....and a complex assemblage from deepwinter ....



.....A luscious comb from MizuSGarden .....



.....and one of our favorites, a colorful pair of pastel kiku from Keikonoheya



As you can see, kanzashi chrysanthemums are as varied as real ones.....so many flower forms and colors.

So, back to Helen's rather casual interpretations......here's a black and white little number to go with today's new fashions.....



Buy it here...black dupioni silk, white shantung silk, and a freshwater pearl. Now here's something similar in a crisp raspberry silk satin that Helen got from Susie F, with yellow jade......



Buy this one here , and true to form, here's a pin made from a vintage silk  kimono Helen got from Suzanne C., sewn with a freshwater pearl.....


Buy it here .

So, in the end, Helen's chrysanthemums look pretty stylized and really don't resemble the real flowers, but you know, nobody much seems to care, and kanzashi is all about being stylized. So, enjoy.