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    papermaking

    Explore " papermaking" with insightful episodes like "Gaelle Jolly – letters and loss, messages and miniatures", "CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art", "CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art", "CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art" and "CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art" from podcasts like ""Creativity Found: finding creativity later in life", "Genetics (Video)", "UC Berkeley (Audio)", "UC Berkeley (Video)" and "Arts and Music (Audio)"" and more!

    Episodes (8)

    Gaelle Jolly – letters and loss, messages and miniatures

    Gaelle Jolly – letters and loss, messages and miniatures

    Navigating life's ups and downs by embracing creativity. 
    In this episode Gaelle Jolly shares her journey from feeling unfulfilled in her job and struggling to find her place in a competitive sector, to discovering a passion for creativity that provided solace during difficult times.
    Despite previously not seeing herself as creative, Gaelle has found an outlet in hobbies including photography and calligraphy, which eventually turned into a small business. We talk about Gaelle's love for paper, stationery, words and the art of bookbinding, which led to the creation of her own line of notebooks and other paper products. She touches on the therapeutic aspect of her creative work, which became a source of meaning and escape as she faced an emotionally challenging future.
    We also discuss the balance between doing something for oneself and turning it into a business, and how she maintains the joy of creating while managing the pressures of entrepreneurship.
    Gaelle's experiences remind us that creativity can be a powerful tool for healing and self-discovery, no matter where life takes us.

    "I think a lot of what I do actually does go back to childhood in some way, and it's about getting lost in an imaginary world."

    If you found value in this episode and would like to show your appreciation, consider supporting the podcast through the Support the Show link, or by sending a boostagram , for example in the Fountain app.
    Your contributions will help me continue to share inspiring stories of creativity and resilience.

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    Researched, edited and produced by Claire Waite Brown
    Music: Day Trips by Ketsa Undercover / Ketsa Creative Commons License Free Music Archive - Ketsa - Day Trips
    Artworks: Emily Portnoi emilyportnoi.co.uk
    Photo: Ella Pallet


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    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art
    To Sheng-Ying Pao, the power of reframing CRISPR lies in what is absolutely ordinary: paper. In CRISPaper, Pao revisited a cultural past in the ancient art of papermaking. In ancient China, wild rice was used to make paper. Pao took rice stalks from plants edited with CRISPR and ground the fibers into pulp. She then poured the pulp over a mesh screen. Every time she dipped the screen into water, the plant fibers would lift and resettle on top of the mesh, eventually making paper. Through the genome-edited rice plant, an ancient practice was juxtaposed with cutting-edge technology. Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Science] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 37388]

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art
    To Sheng-Ying Pao, the power of reframing CRISPR lies in what is absolutely ordinary: paper. In CRISPaper, Pao revisited a cultural past in the ancient art of papermaking. In ancient China, wild rice was used to make paper. Pao took rice stalks from plants edited with CRISPR and ground the fibers into pulp. She then poured the pulp over a mesh screen. Every time she dipped the screen into water, the plant fibers would lift and resettle on top of the mesh, eventually making paper. Through the genome-edited rice plant, an ancient practice was juxtaposed with cutting-edge technology. Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Science] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 37388]

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art
    To Sheng-Ying Pao, the power of reframing CRISPR lies in what is absolutely ordinary: paper. In CRISPaper, Pao revisited a cultural past in the ancient art of papermaking. In ancient China, wild rice was used to make paper. Pao took rice stalks from plants edited with CRISPR and ground the fibers into pulp. She then poured the pulp over a mesh screen. Every time she dipped the screen into water, the plant fibers would lift and resettle on top of the mesh, eventually making paper. Through the genome-edited rice plant, an ancient practice was juxtaposed with cutting-edge technology. Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Science] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 37388]

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art
    To Sheng-Ying Pao, the power of reframing CRISPR lies in what is absolutely ordinary: paper. In CRISPaper, Pao revisited a cultural past in the ancient art of papermaking. In ancient China, wild rice was used to make paper. Pao took rice stalks from plants edited with CRISPR and ground the fibers into pulp. She then poured the pulp over a mesh screen. Every time she dipped the screen into water, the plant fibers would lift and resettle on top of the mesh, eventually making paper. Through the genome-edited rice plant, an ancient practice was juxtaposed with cutting-edge technology. Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Science] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 37388]

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art
    To Sheng-Ying Pao, the power of reframing CRISPR lies in what is absolutely ordinary: paper. In CRISPaper, Pao revisited a cultural past in the ancient art of papermaking. In ancient China, wild rice was used to make paper. Pao took rice stalks from plants edited with CRISPR and ground the fibers into pulp. She then poured the pulp over a mesh screen. Every time she dipped the screen into water, the plant fibers would lift and resettle on top of the mesh, eventually making paper. Through the genome-edited rice plant, an ancient practice was juxtaposed with cutting-edge technology. Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Science] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 37388]

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art

    CRISPaper: Understanding CRISPR Gene-Editing through Art
    To Sheng-Ying Pao, the power of reframing CRISPR lies in what is absolutely ordinary: paper. In CRISPaper, Pao revisited a cultural past in the ancient art of papermaking. In ancient China, wild rice was used to make paper. Pao took rice stalks from plants edited with CRISPR and ground the fibers into pulp. She then poured the pulp over a mesh screen. Every time she dipped the screen into water, the plant fibers would lift and resettle on top of the mesh, eventually making paper. Through the genome-edited rice plant, an ancient practice was juxtaposed with cutting-edge technology. Series: "UC Berkeley News" [Science] [Arts and Music] [Show ID: 37388]

    Leslie A. Grossman of aLGae Book and Paper on How to make a book without losing your marbles

    Leslie A. Grossman of aLGae Book and Paper on How to make a book without losing your marbles

    Sara Marie Miller and Leslie A. Grossman talk about the magic of seaweed, making books, marbling paper, screenprinting and monoprinting and so much more! Leslie is an artist, teacher, curator and owner of aLGae Book and Paper. She teaches workshops at Peters Valley and curates a gallery in Philadelphia while making her own handmade marbled paper and stitching them into her gorgeous artist books and sketchbooks. We discuss teaching and making art after grad school, honoring the flow of making work and building up a reservoir of ideas. We talk about how cats are endlessly inspiring, how to figure out a business name and the advantages of putting seaweed on your vagina. Also, Sol Lewitt and Keith Smith are terrific.

    https://www.leslieagrossman.com/algae/
    https://www.etsy.com//shop/aLGaeBookAndPaper
    http://www.keithsmithbooks.com
    https://www.aidazea.com/
    http://www.saramariemiller.me/

    Intro and outro music by Komiku

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