“From brokenness to beauty: just like these plates, even shattered souls can be mended with the gold of kindness.”
As the blog Slim Expectations turns 3, they have celebrated with a blogging contest filled with a whole lot of prompts (including themes...
Is your favorite cup broken? Repair the broken pieces with Kintsugi! A guide to the Japanese repair technique
Kintsugi (also known as kintsukuroi) is the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with gold in order to highlight and show off the imperfections caused by the breakage. Traditionally you would use liquid silver, liquid gold, or lacquer with powdered gold to both join the broken pieces and embelli
Kintsugi nails are trending again, so we asked a professional nail artist how we can get the look.
Kintsugi pottery art is a traditional Japanese form of mending broken pieces to make them vintage and valuable. Find project ideas to craft.
Is your favorite cup broken? Repair the broken pieces with Kintsugi! A guide to the Japanese repair technique
Kintsugi, or "golden joinery", is a traditional Japanese practice of mending ceramics with lacquer, typically urushi and metal powder.
The ancient Japanese art of Kintsugi gives new, glittering life to broken pottery that might otherwise end up in the trash. Repair your broken plates, bowls, and dinnerware with gold seams.
Kintsugi pottery art is a traditional Japanese form of mending broken pieces to make them vintage and valuable. Find project ideas to craft.
Kintsugi is the Japanese art of repairing ceramics, but you'd also be surprised to know that it's a practice that's as easy to recreate yourself as it is beautiful.
Like the art of kintsugi, God restores us when we face broken hearts and makes us more beautiful through the process.
Grief makes us feel crushed and broken beyond repair. The Japanese art of Kintsugi shows that God can make us broken but beautiful.
Brighton-based artist Charlotte Bailey was fascinated by the traditional Japanese mending technique called kintsugi, where a broken ceramic object is repaired with gold, silver or platinum, to accentuate the damage and ‘honor’ its history. In this interpretation, Bailey utilizes an embroidery method to reassemble a broken vase—a sort of hybrid between kintsugi and darning with a beautiful result. She first wraps each broken piece in fabric and then uses gold metallic thread to painstakingly patchwork the pieces together. More
Kintsugi, Japanese art! This Concrete Decor is a Minimalist Art. High, luxury quality picture. I can do it to you also in bigger size!!!! Colors: Grey, white and gold Gold leaf metal lines. Kintsugi Art, meaning is...all, what was broken, Is repairable. The picture is unframed. Made for order! Ready to ship within 5 days. Return policy: i dont accept cancellation.