With a gentle design that wraps an important business card
It is a business card holder made of total cloth that does not cover people.
The hand-sewn accent is made with a little effort.
There is an inner pocket, so you don't have to worry about storage.
(The shopkeeper is too convenient to go back to a business card holder without pockets.)
[Patterns that are in stock on this site can be prepared.] Please let us know by number]
https://kakehash.thebase.in/items/69240815
◆ About the traditional culture used
●Saya●
Striped textiles that have been inherited only in a limited area of Syria. Palestine is close to Syria and was connected as the same region before the border was drawn. Therefore, Saya is a familiar material used in men's national costumes and obi, and is still imported directly from Syria to private shops in Palestine.
●Old Stitch●
The technique used to sew the sayah is the same as that used to sew traditional costumes.
◆ About the creator "Aisha Design"
Aisha, a Palestinian who works as a designer × environmental issues, creates products that combine upcycled materials and traditional culture. She is a wonderful woman who strives to make her hometown, which is often referred to as a "conflict zone," known as a "conflict zone," to hire people in the area who need income, as well as to develop lectures and tree planting in the community to prevent plastic from being wasted. I learned about her work through SNS and wanted to introduce her in Japan, so I approached her.
What is the situation in Palestine?
I don't think there are many people who are familiar with Palestine and what kind of life and problems they have.
I, Takahashi, the representative of the chopsticks, met the local people through a homestay.
Until then, I had a strong image of conflict, and I couldn't imagine life at all.
I think that if you read the stay report, you will feel more like traveling.
(https://note.com/kakehashi_pale/m/m70c26db08307)
Palestine has a strong sense of Osaka, and at worst it is nosy, and at best it is a place where even foreigners are accepted.
The scenery and food are full of history, and the locals are proud of the local culture.
At the end of the 19th century, in this area, where various religions coexisted side by side, there was a movement to create a "country made up of only one ethnic group".
Coming from the West, Palestine came under occupation, and life continued even though freedom was not available.
I visited such a place and wanted to live in a world where people, culture, and nature are valued as a matter of course, and I wanted to work with these people by multiplication, so I launched Kakekeke.