Thursday, October 04, 2007

Here is Paige enjoying a rare moment of relaxation in a hammock made by Raymond. They are completely hand made and sell for $30.00. The colors available are yellow and yellow with a green accent. Stand not included, you have to see Andy for that. Place your order at konnyskorner@gmail.com
It took a while to get this on the blog as the weather plays havoc with the internet.
















1 Comments:

Blogger Sequoyah said...

The Glam is gone but the people of Haiti still need your help
Soon after the earthquake shook Haiti on January 12, 2010, a photograph of a mountain of dead bodies gripped Candice Anitra. The shared humanity screamed out, and raw emotion compelled Anitra to compose a song as a reminder that we are all connected and vulnerable, living on one shared earth, and responsible for supporting one another. On the second anniversary of the devastation, and in advance of the release of Anitra's sophomore album, Big Tree, Candice is releasing the track, "Today," with a video for the song, in order to raise still-much-needed funds The video pairs images from Nadia Shira Cohen's post-quake Haiti photo-essay, "Exodus" (Harper's, May 2010), with footage of Candice's performing the driving, melodic, pleading track, while editors Karim Lopez and Simon Doolittle have enhanced the piece with a retro-film aesthetic and a motion to the images that conveys the lyrics -"the way you shook this place, this rock in space." The song and video invoke a sense of urgency, and viewers are encouraged to name their price to download the song from candiceanitra.bandcamp.com The song is exclusively available on BandCamp only. http://candiceanitra.bandcamp.com/ , from which the proceeds will benefitthe people of Haiti, via Partners in Health's http://www.pih.org/ construction of the 180,000 square foot, 320-bed Mirebalais National Teaching Hospital that will change the face of public health care in Haiti. The Global Syndicate's http:// www.globalsyndicate.org "Shine a Light" Campaign to provide solar-powered lights to subsistence wage earners -who otherwise pay up to 30% of their income for kerosene to see at night -improving education, productivity, and the environment, while reducing violence against women and children.

Find Candice Anitra on Twitter @candiceanitra Facebook at : http://www.facebook.com/ candiceanitramusic Reverbnation: http:// www.reverbnation.com/candicean

5:27 PM  

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