Piñatas

The Sunday Paper #511

June 1, 2024

I have always loved grids, and this week I explored them in two ways, while using up pulp from the Papermaking Master Class last week. On the left is a watermark featuring a Japanese pattern called shippo – seven treasures – referring to the seven treasures of Buddhism (gold, silver, lapis lazuli, crystal, agate, red pearl, and carnelian). These treasures represent the seven powers of faith, perseverance, sense of shame, avoidance of wrongdoing, mindfulness, concentration, and wisdom. The shippo design, with its eternal chain of interconnected circles, is a pattern of good omens, filled with wishes for happiness, harmony, and karma. This watermark is inspired by my upcoming trip to Japan.

The piece on the right is still wet in the photo – I embedded hemp string grid in between sheets of high shrinkage, translucent abaca. It will shrink as it dries, and I’m curious to see what happens.

——————————————————————————————–––––––

I had the pleasure of interviewing Roberto Benavidez on Episode #125 of Paper Talk. Benavidez is a sculptor specializing in impeccably crafted piñata forms that play with the underlying themes of race and sin that are innate in the piñata. His forms are layered with his identity as a mixed-race queer artist. Benavidez has been featured in national, international and on-line publications, including ARTnews, Artsy, Atlas Obscura, hifructose.com, Hyperallergic, Politiken, The Guardian, The New York Times and This Is Colossal.  He has exhibited his work in numerous group and solo shows, and Benavidez’s Javelina Girl (Illuminated Piñata No. 14) was featured on the cover of The New York Times, Fine Arts & Exhibits section on October 23, 2022 . Enjoy our conversation!

——————————————————————————————–––––––

I have always had a fondness for type, so I was delighted when a reader shared this paper alphabet with me. Reina Takahashi transposes the expressive, refined flourishes common in calligraphy into this exquisite series of paper type.

As seen on Colossal, All images © Reina Takahashi.

——————————————————————————————–––––––

What an interesting story about Kim Parker’s floral patterns – inspired by walks in her Carroll Gardens neighborhood in Brooklyn – and how they became the newest forever stamp. This is a bit of a stretch, but stamps are printed on paper!

———————————————————————————————–––––––

This is a fascinating discovery of an old typeface that was dumped into the Thames River.

—–—————————————————————————————–––––––

Paper TidbitsA sad note about the passing of Fran Lacy, who worked at Twinrocker Handmade Paper back in the day.I head to Japan next Sunday, June 9th. There will be an edition of The Sunday Paper that day, but then I’m taking a little break (there might be a brief note mid-trip) and I will be back in your in box on in early July. In the meantime, I’ll be posting about The Japan Paper Tour on Instagram.

—–—————————————————————————————–––––––

If you read this blog regularly, would you consider making a donation to support the research, writing, design and delivery of The Sunday Paper?

Tell 3500 paper enthusiasts about your work by promoting your business in The Sunday Paper.

———————————————————————————————––––––

SHARE THIS blog post with your paper-loving friends!

I occasionally have affiliate links in my blog posts – links to products in which I will receive a small commission if you make a purchase. Thanks for your support!

The post Piñatas appeared first on Helen Hiebert Studio.

1 like ·   •  6 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on June 01, 2024 10:15
Comments Showing 1-6 of 6 (6 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Sher (new)

Sher Davidson I love grids, too. Thank you Helen for your interesting post. I don't get on Goodreads enough to keep up, but always enjoy the posts of fellow readers. Hope you'll read my books: historical fiction "Dark Secrets" and my recently published travel memoir: Europe with Two Kids and a Van. Stay well!


message 2: by Helen (new)

Helen Hiebert Thanks, Sher. I haven't been on Goodreads in years - thanks for bringing me back. Just finished the manuscript for my next book. Keep writing!


message 3: by Sher (new)

Sher Davidson I just subscribed to your newsletter. I'm still interested in art and creating from my artistic imagination but have two more books I'm working on also, so not finding time to "do art"! At 82, days fly by too quickly. So glad to keep up a bit with you! Please check out my website. I've taken a six-month break from my blog and newsletter but plan on getting back to both soon! I'm also studying Swedish so I can communicate with my family in Sweden. Learning a language keeps the old brain working and growing!


message 4: by Helen (new)

Helen Hiebert Amazing, Sher! I have such fond memories of our days with June, and that class at Sitka. My mother lives nearby and turns 86 tomorrow.


message 5: by Sher (new)

Sher Davidson I'd love to meet your mother. Do you mean she lives near you and remind me where you are, please? Or, did you mean she lives nearby in Oregon where June was? You do know that June passed away a few years ago. I still stay in touch with her daughter, Kyoko who lives in Taos. She made tea for Gary and me when we visited there two years ago. She is a beautiful reflection of her mother!


message 6: by Helen (new)

Helen Hiebert My mother is near me in Colorado (we live near Vail). Yes, I knew about June, and that she was ill. Family lineage is special!


back to top