Monday, August 27, 2012

peace bomb.

I'm back from the big city, and I'm happy to report that I found tons of new lines for the store. Over the next two months, we will be receiving new merchandise daily, and in conjunction with that, I'll be blogging every day about some of the awesome new products we are bringing into the store. 

Naturally, I have to start with my favorite. This company had a very unassuming booth at the gift show. Very simple, no fillers. I was completely unaware of the incredible story I was about to hear.  The company is article22, and their project is called "peace bomb". We will be selling the peace bomb bangles ($25/ea), and will be proud to tell the story of how this bracelet came to be.

I'm going to let article22 do the talking, because I think they say it best:


A bracelet. 
A story about war and peace. Destruction and reconstruction. History. Instead of words, this story is composed of fragments of bombs, melted and shaped into a circle, a bracelet, a reminder. 

1973. 
Laos. A major theatre of war during the Vietnam conflict, the US has ceased its 9-year long aerial bombardment known as the Secret War intended to halt the spread of communism across Indochina. Communist Lao leaders and 23,000 civilians slowly emerge from homes carved in the karst cave complexes of Houaphan Province. 

1975. 
War is over. Saigon has fallen to the North Vietnamese Army. Victory within near reach, the Pathet Lao advance westward. A lone man from Houaphan also moves west. He journeys through the emerald-mountain passes toward the bomb-cratered Plain des Jars.

Naphia Village, Laos. 
The man makes a temporary home. He collects scrap metal from farmland and forest scarred by war debris from the 250-260 million bombs that were dropped. He crafts spoons from aluminum melted in an earthen kiln and cast in hand-sculpted molds of wood and ash. 

Villagers watch, listen, learn. 
The first Naphia resident learns the trade from the lone traveler. He crafts and sells spoons. Eventually, he teaches the technique to his son. Today, 10 resourceful and enterprising families supplement subsistence farming activities with income from repurposing scrap metal. Through resourcefulness and problem solving, they take a constructive approach to a legacy of destruction.

2009. 
peaceBOMB bracelets. Developed through the collaboration of spoon makers, the RISE Project, and ARTICLE 22, a social enterprise that supports sustainable development through design thinking. Each bracelet purchase brings: helps support artisan families, the community development fund, and clearance of unexploded ordnance from Lao land.

NOW. 
BUY BACK THE BOMBS.


I'm sure you can see why I fell in love with these bangles. They should be making their debut at Green Roost in about 3 weeks. If you want us to hold one for you, email me at greenroost@verizon.net, and I'll add you to the list. 

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