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How to support Wendy Moore's work with Nepalese women...
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Post How to support Wendy Moore's work with Nepalese women... 
Many of you know Wendy Moore right? She was at the very first polymer clay guild retreat. A beautiful generous talented woman, teacher and lover of life and all things colourful. For those who haven’t seen her work…there is a wonderful pic of her Nepalese dolls at Heathers site on the polymer clay guild page:
http://www.polymerclay.com.au/information.php?info_id=9&osCsid=cf363208e6b15220fa3084c16b06544e

She now lives in Nepal, her husband works in the hospital there. As much as she would love to be in contact with the forum, internet is a whole different thing in Nepal. Connection is dicey and electricity limited. She and I have kept in touch and I have been at her for ages about letting me help her in her plight to help free the Nepalese of unspeakable tragedies. She’s now at a stage of readiness…and very happy for me to tell all aussie polyclayers and sends you her love and asks me to explain why she’s not able to talk to you herself.
She has been teaching Nepalese women jewellery making skills and polymer claying skills to help them become empowered and self sufficient. I have copy pasted her story to you just below. But before you read that, I want to ask any of you who can, to donate in some way…for us the logical solution is to buy Kato clay and send it to her. It has to be Kato due to the intense heat there and Kato is the only clay that is still workable in those conditions. I know she uses white and brown a lot for her dolls but also colours. As you’ll see from her letter, postage is expensive and not all that reliable. The parcels that have the most chance of making it through are the ones addressed via the hospital and look like printed matter as it’s less likely they will arouse interest…maybe strap a few packs together it could look like a book? Printed matter up to 500gm in an A4 packet can go thru at a cheaper rate.
Send to this address exactly as it is written:
Malcolm and Wendy Moore
Department of General Practice and Emergency Medicine
BPKIHS
PO Box 7053
KATHMANDU
NEPAL

If you want to email Wendy: acolourfullife@live.com


It would be amazing if some of you could get some clay through to her and the women who’s lives can be dramatically improved as a result of your generosity…

Wendy’s letter to you:


Polymer Clay, Picnics and Perseverance!
Jhapa, in eastern Nepal, has a bad reputation. It is “known” for mosquitoes, malaria, heat and drug and human trafficking. There is widespread poverty and, for women particularly, life can be dreadful. But, Jhapa is also the home of some amazing people. People who would say they are very “ordinary” but who are anything but.

A group of young Nepali friends were concerned about the lives of local women who were subjected to violence-usually domestic violence but sometimes related to trafficking. Women are “tricked” into marriages and then sold into the tragically huge sex industry in India. Some are “rescued” or escape but they are often not welcomed back by their families and have to try and make life for themselves (and children) as best they can. The friends knew that hand-outs were only a short term solution for these very vulnerable women so they got together to create “Sammunat”. Their goal was to work WITH the ladies to develop sources of income generation so that these ladies could gain independence, dignity and hope.

It has been inspiring to have been involved with the board members and the courageous and resilient women of Sammunat. Together we have been working on jewellery designs using pote (pronounced poh-teh like…um…no English word I can think of!), which are Nepal’s traditional wedding beads-made in Czechoslovakia! Jewellery is an integral part of the Nepali culture and one of the reasons I love living here is that it is a country where too much jewellery is not enough. If I head down to the market without earrings, necklaces, bracelets (not to mention face ornamentation if you so choose) I may as well go naked.

We’ve long wanted to incorporate traditional designs into polymer clay to make our own beads but have been hindered by a number of factors. Firstly, the organisation runs on the smell of an oily rag. We can only buy materials as we sell items and this has been very small scale to date. Even if we had rupees, polymer clay has proven VERY hard to get here. Tracking it down in India (to avoid hefty postage costs and the dodgy postal system) has been unsuccessful to date. Thirdly, ovens are as rare as hen’s teeth in Jhapa! Cooking is done on open fires or in clay ovens and I haven’t been able to get hold of the “Hardening Polymer Clay in clay ovens with inconsistent temperature control” DVD for love nor money.

Despite this, the ladies were desperate to “play with clay” and make a “Fruit Salad” necklace they’d seen me wear. I said this would be “just for fun” which was a hard concept for these ladies to get. Heavy domestic work for little Nepali girls starts by 9 and they marry young.

We made citrus canes and leaf canes. Because we only had one pasta machine between 10 of us, I’d made most of the Skinner blends in advance then demonstrated one and we did one together. You soften Kato clay with a pasta machine so that was done in advance. Nepal has ‘load shedding’ which sounds a bit like “We have so much electricity we have to shed it” but is in fact the opposite. Most people have two four-hour blocks of electricity and often one of those starts at midnight! Cooking has to be timed with power. Bring on that clay oven DVD. We incorporated the bead assembly with a long planned picnic. It was the hottest experience I have EVER had (can you have 100% humidity?) and thank goodness Kato clay copes with the heat.

Now the ladies are full of ideas about using polymer clay. They want to make hand-made beads, using Nepali designs, which they can combine with existing beads in new and exciting ways. We don’t have a website yet (something else in the “one day” category) but I’d love to answer any questions. Until we make the polymer clay jewellery that changes the world – well, their world - the ladies will make aprons that turn you into a sensational cook, pote fringed scarves that take ten kilos off and make you look ten years younger and silver and bead jewellery that will make your heart sing. Would I lie to you?

Maybe, as well as the mixture of things Jhapa is known for, it will now be known as the birthplace of the Nepal Polymer Clay Guild.


Wendy Moore
Dharan, NEPAL







Last edited by melaniedilday on Sat May 30, 2009 6:41 am; edited 2 times in total

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Now this is inspiring. I don't know how much I can send from here but I will give it the ole college try mel. I also gave Donna the heads up about this and the link to this post. good onya for taking this on for her. hugs
K


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Why don't you send this story to donna Kato and the company making Kato clay. If they provide it at cost a lot more could be sent over. As a large company, they could take this on as a charity. It's an opportunity for a global project for them. Looking at the bigger picture may be far more helpful than individuals sending the odd packet.
I'm sure companies that run travel groups over to there would also be able to get the stuff across. I Oz I would contact Intrepid travel, as they run very good culturally sensitive tours where travellers meet many and at times stay with local people.


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Thanks Kathi, that's very wonderful of you.

Sabine, thanks so much for your input, I hadn't thought of the possibility of travel groups being a way to get that clay to the girls. I will run it past Wendy and see what she says. Ofcourse I had thought of contacting Donna but Wendy just wanted me to feed out this info to the forum at this time. I was sure Donna would hear about it, word travels fast in the polymer clay community (as Kathi has just proved *G*), she will get in touch if she feels to. The thing is, even if Wendy can get an endless supply of clay, there's still the problem of getting it there...the best way so far has been mentioned but I will persue the travel group angle.

In the meantime, any and all donations kindly accepted...Smile I'm sending some off today!


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Can you reduce the size of the pictures so that everything you have printed will be on one screen and not spread across two screen size, it is very hard to read when one has to scroll back and forth every line Sad


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awwww poor Charlotte...sorry to put you to all that trouble. Time was of the essence when I put those up but I have time today so will do that now for you... Wink


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Have you seen Polymer Clay Daily today? Cynthia has featured Wendy and her troupe of Nepalese women in the hope of raising awareness and getting people around the world interested in helping. Brought tears to my eyes!


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Mel, I will try and send some accross too.It seems that really to get all of the supplies she requires that a major corporation needs to get on board to ensure the safe delivery of clay.It would be amazing if Donna Kato could do something for these women!

Idea!!! We could send the clay conditioned and flat!

I have met Wendy and have been fortunate to do one of her classes. She is an energetic and inspiring woman. I think she is the perfect person for these women to have in their lives.


I have just posted this in the Etsy plymer clay guild and added the info to my blog.


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Thanks Mel it was making me sick trying to read it. I don't have any Kato clay nor am I in a position to help right now, but I do hope Donna can help as this would be perfect for them. But keep us posted as maybe there will be other things that I and others may be able to do or send them. When they get a website up I would be happy to spread the word and get traffic to their site and buyers. All the best to them.


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What an inspiring story. Wendy is truly an angel. I too don't use Kato. Is Premo any good or still just too soft in those conditions?
Will spread the word though.


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Hi Mel and all.
I did not know Wendy was still in India,often thought about her, she was such an inspiration at the Poly clay retreat in Canberra,
and just like her to be doing so much good.
She really is a lovely person, and well worth the try to help for all those women.
I like the idea of sending the clay flat.
I keep all my scrap clay flat in plastic folders, as it is easier to keep as well as to condition again when needed.
I do have a small amount of Kato so will see what I can do.
I still have pics of you and Wendy at the retreat, and I have seen the recent pics of her work on Heathers Site.
Im sure this will be picked up by those polymer clay companies when they get to know about it.
What a project.
Those ladies in Nepal have the best teacher in Wendy.
she is so talented isnt she.
One other thing.
I have been recently been reading about people boiling their polyclay beads for about 30mins and then putting in the oven for about 15 I think.
I have even done some in the Micro wave believe it or not.
that was advocated by the malaysian gal cant think of her name, but it does work.
I even threw them against the wall and they didnt break after their being cooked in the micro wave amazing.
Has anyone done theirs in the microwave I would love to knbow?
,Maybe Wendys gals can boil them in pots out in the open and save that electricity.
Bye for now
love
Elizabeth

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No worries Charlotte and thanks.

Dani, I don't use much Kato either, I'm just gonna order some and send it along. I live frugally myself and quite frankly, usually can't donate to any cause but my own...but I live like a queen compared to these people and for this month, I'm gonna forego wine to pay for clay. It'll do my waistline and liver good too!

Elizabeth, lovely to hear from you. I'll send your message to Wendy. I've never boiled beads myself but maybe she can experiment. Thanks too for your offer to send something along to her. At this stage we are just trying to get something happening in the interim so your support is very much appreicated.

Nope, never microwaved them either. How interesting. I'm always slightly wary of other ways of curing beads than baking because I'd prefer a tried and true method for jewellery I have for sale...but if anyone can shed some more light on the boiling method for Wendy, maybe that's an option for her...I'll go take a peek at glassattic.com

Intrepid Travel can't help...it's against the rules to have their travellers take packages to Nepal... what with the whole clamp down and everything, I do understand this. They can't very well set it up and guarantee that there's nothing illegal in the packages or in the clay. So for now, we are limited to under 500g packs sent via the hospital.


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I did try boiling once - when I was out camping. I found that some of the beads cracked next to the hole though - I holed first with a skewer before cooking. Might have been just me as I had read that it was 'do-able'.


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there was a big discussion about this on the PCC delphi message boards (boiling clay). Water boils at something like 212F which is way less then the suggested baking temp for clay. I may use boiling to heat set things (like cazza did camping) but I would want to make sure the polymer was totally cured by baking in an oven when I got home. Garie Sim...oh heck I forgot his last name, tested it and swears by it. My thought is...boil away, then put the pretty away for a year or two and see how they are then, before boiling and selling. Time will tell eh?


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Thanks girls... I see how the chemistry works...thanks for that clarification Kathi, makes perfect sense. Kato is also a higher baking temp than the others so I doubt it would do as a permanent cure eh. Pity we don't have a year or two...but still worth doing the test and seeing for ourselves. There will still be Nepalese without ovens in two years time!


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