Sunday, August 25, 2013

Moroccan Kilim Rugs from the Middle Atlas Mountains

The Middle Atlas region of Morocco curves from the coastal foothills east of Casablanca past Khenifra and north to the Mount Zerhoun area above Fes. It consists of rugged mountains and fertile valleys which are well suited to raising sheep for the wool used in the flat woven carpets with their intricate patterns.

The primary format in the flatweaves involves panels composed of one wide and two narrow bands with geometric designs separated by areas of plainweave. These days, most kilims have white cotton for warps because of its strength plus it keeps its shape and enhances the design elements.



The difference between a kilim area rug and a carpet is that a kilim design is made by interweaving the variously colored wefts and warps, creating what is known as flatweave. In a carpet, short strands of different color, usually of wool, are knotted onto the warps and held together by pressing these separately knotted strands. The excessive length of the knotted materials are then shorn off to create a level surface.

There are no precise statistics of how many women weavers there are in Morocco but it is estimated that still to this day 50% of women living in rural areas have a loom in their kitchen, sheep in their backyard and recently dyed wool hanging from their cloth-lines. Traditionally, before girls reach the age where they can start weaving, they help out cleaning and carding the wool and apprentice from the older women in the families. The first piece of finished rug is most often their dowry piece. From that point on the young women continue weaving until years later they become master weavers.   

Kilim rugs are not just floor coverings. Some become wall hangings, some are bench or divan coverings and others are made into individual kilim pillow covers. 

World Travel Art works directly with Berber women and provides access to markets which empowers them to define their place within the Moroccan carpet trade and helps to carry on a tradition that spans the ages. 



Saturday, August 3, 2013

Craftworks Cambodia

Transforming Old Bomb Shells and Bullet Cases into beautiful pieces of Jewelry

Craftsworks of Cambodia is an organization working to provide training and marketing skills to home based producers through the sale of their contemporary products made from recycled and sustainable materials.

The jewelry artisans in particular live in an underprivileged community approximately 30 minutes from Phnom Penh. They have been trained and skillfully transform bomb casings and bullet shells into stunning jewelry pieces bearing the Tree of Life and other beautiful designs. Craftworks of Cambodia pays the artisans a fair wage that helps to provide for their families and support their communities.  

Meet the artisans by clicking right here. 

www.worldtravelart.com offers several of the jewelry pieces onsite. 








Friday, May 24, 2013

The Medina of Fez - A UNESCO World Heritage Center



Founded in the 9th century and home to the oldest university in the world, Fez  retained its status as Morocco's cultural and spiritual center. It became a World Heritage Site in 1981. The Medina of Fez is believed to be the world's largest contiguous car-free urban area and conserves the majority of its original functions and attributes. It truly transmits a life style, skills and heritage that persist despite the diverse effects of the evolving modern societies.

The City of Fez is built into a concave valley and the Medina was built as a walled area that can be accessed through one of its eight main gates, all fairly spread out around the city's circumference. What one finds inside the Median is a maze of zigzagging streets descending in the direction of the city center and ascending as they head out towards the walls. This knowledge can be helpful when you come to the Medina for the first time or you get disoriented in it - which is very easy by the way. 

At every corner of the streets, in every building lies the mark of traditional skills of the past. Traditional artisanal crafts are alive in the crafts and trading areas of the Medina and part of the Heritage Preservation of UNESCO.  

World Travel Art has a wonderful, long term relationship with a Fassi (people from Fes), small family run business and the Artisan groups they work with. Handicrafts from Fes and the Moroccan Mid-Atlas Mountain are an important part of our Fair Trade and Eco Friendly products offered on site.