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Informative Articles

Advertising on a budget -- Part 3: Frequency, frequency, frequency
This is the third article of a three-part series. I'm illustrating the marketing challenges of PrescottWeddings.com, a small business. If you don't remember anything else about marketing, remember this: Frequency is king. The more often you...

Creative And Innovative Culture, Change Management – Three Easy Tests
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation and innovation can be defined as idea selection, development and commercialisation. From this simple definition, it is clear that certain cultural characteristics ought to be...

Creative Thinking versus Critical Thinking
The process of creative thinking is often, mistakenly, intertwined with critical thinking. There is a tendency to write and edit simultaneously, couple hypothesis generation and evaluation, combine problem identification with solution. To increase...

Feng Shui - Create Prosperity at the Office by Clearing the Clutter
The essence of Feng Shui revolves around using positive energy, or Chi, to enhance your surroundings. Serenity, prosperity, and wealth follow the occupants of homes and offices with Chi. Your office should be a pleasant, un-cluttered, well-lit, and...

Innovation Management - Forcing Inspiration
Most people, when they have to complete a creative endeavour, often tend to wait for inspiration. It is not unusual to find, therefore, that most people take inordinately long to complete projects or never finish them at all. Look at the infinite...

It Starts with the Selection Process: Prevention is the Best Cure
How many times have you heard this when talking with an experienced coach or consultant. You say: 1.My department is not making quotas. I’ve provided training. I motivate. What am I doing wrong? 2.My marketing department head does good work,...

Managing Monsters in Meetings - Part 7, Personal Attacks
Personal attacks hurt people, mar communication, and end creativity. If they become part of a meeting's culture, they drive the participants into making safe and perhaps useless contributions. Approach 1: Speak to the group Set the stage for the...

On the Path: Life Coaching for Small Business Owners
O ne of the distinctions that sets coaching apart from other types of consulting is that coaching specifically addresses the client's sense of who they are in the world, and helps the client make life choices that are aligned with...

Seeds Don't Worry - Natures Way To Success
?How in the world are you going to make it?? she asked. ?My work isn?t selling and I?m just going to quit!? The above comment came from a friend experiencing frustration over her artwork not selling. She also asked me how I could continue to keep...

Three times more sales of CD with the Belarusian music
For the last half-year, sales of CD with the national pop music in Belarus have grown almost three times. Among the best selling Belarusian musicians English-speaking group Atlantica, Tsyany-Tolkaj, J-mors and Alexey Hlestov. In opinion of Nikolay...

 
 
 
Basket Making Can Be Therapeutic

Basket making has proved to be therapeutic and therapy for stress relief. Baskets are useful and decorative. People love to have baskets at home because they are handy to store things like fruit and magazines, they make beautiful gift hampers, and they add beauty to the decor. Besides, you can let your creativity take wings and create baskets of different shapes and sizes.

A variety of material can be used to make baskets as long as the materials are flexible. Most craft stores offer a supply of machine made reeds and splints. You can make baskets with cattail leaves or stalks, corn husks, honeysuckle vines, pine needles, and daffodil leaves. You can gather them and hang them to dry. Before using any of these materials, you will need to soak them in lukewarm water for five minutes. Then, wrap them in a damp towel as you are working so they don't dry out or over soak.

To make a basket from a vine, for instance, you will need about ten 3' long pieces and around fifteen 4' long pieces of vine. You should choose the thickest pieces to make the frame. The first step of basket making is to form a square by laying three 3' spokes on top of 3 bottom spokes. Then, take a piece of the long thin vine, called a weaver, and fold it in such a manner that one end is shorter than the other, so that you can loop it over top spokes and then weave it over and under bottom spokes.

Weaving is the next step. The involves weaving it over three spokes, under the next three, over the next three, and so on. You have to do this

 


at least three times before you can begin weaving it through the spokes individually. Gradually, you will go on adding more spokes by inserting each one along the side of a spoke in between a previous weave. Interestingly, as you add and weave, you will start having more space between the spokes. At this point you can cut new spokes and insert them to fill these spaces and start weaving them into a pattern.

Once you've made the bottom 6" wide, it's important to dampen the spokes until they are flexible enough to be turned upward, and continue weaving as you make your sides.

The final step involves finishing off the top edge of the basket. For this you need to bend the spokes over and weave them amongst themselves one at a time. For example, take one spoke, bend it to the right and weave it over the one next to it, then under the next one, then over the next, and continue in the same manner. When that spoke has woven itself as far as it can, do this with the next one, and then continue until they have all been secured down. If you spot any untidy ends sticking out, snip them off neatly.

Making baskets is an art. The basic technique of basket making has been around for generations. It reveals a marvelous process of hard work, beauty, and culture.

About The Author

Cassael Cetino is the administrator of A Plus Baskets, your one stop shop online for all of your basket needs. Find what you need at: http://www.aplusbaskets.com