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Monday, June 30, 2008

Handycraft Today

Handycraft

Walton on Thames


Welcome to Handycraft - the premier joiner, carpenter and kitchen designer of Walton on Thames.

Here at Handycraft we provide a full service ranging from kitchen design to electrical work to all domestic and commercial customers within Walton on Thames.
Adding the personal touch to every job we do, we're small enough to care but big enough to cope with any electrical, joinery or home design or maintenance job.

Our range of services include:

- Kitchen and Bathroom Design
- Kitchen and Bathroom Installation
- Carpentry
- Joinery
- Plastering
- Plumbing
- Electrical Contractors


And more!

With years of experience we have built up an excellent local reputation for providing quality workmanship throughout all our work and have many word of mouth recommendations and much repeat business.

No job is too small and all home maintenance work is considered - just ask!

Open throughout the year our competitive prices and great service makes us the number one choice for all home maintenance work within Walton on Thames.

For more information or a quote call Handycraft today!

Welcome To handycraft

WELCOME

Our art shop provide hotel's sandal. The product made from the selected material whichs is easily found in Indonesia's environment such as enceng gondok, akar wlingi and another selected materials.

If you need further information about our product, please do not be hesitate to send us e-mail or directly by phone, we can discuss about everything that you want to know. Beside that, you can make another design (or send me a sample) and material as you want, we can make it.

The price of hotel's sandal is US$ 1,8 per unit net. The minimum order is 1000 unit. Get special discount for more than 1500 order. The order will be fullfiled within 45 days since the signing of purchasing order.

Friday, June 27, 2008

Inside AdSense: Make the move...to Google Accounts

Inside AdSense: Make the move...to Google Accounts
www.newbalihandycraft.blogspot.com

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Welcome to Bali Handicraft - arts and crafts website


Bali handicraft wholesale - Artsbali.com, provides many types of handicraft such as: natural leaves photo album, photo frame, address book, note book, wind chimes, drums in carving, full carving, painting, full painting, plain, airbrush and special alpine, abstract carving, Lombok handicrafts and many others.
We invite you to come to Bali-the major tourist destination. We will give our best products and services. We are willing to cooperate with importers, wholesalers, and distributor from all around the world.

The connection between Bali handicrafts, culture, arts and crafts
Bali is a place where arts, culture, religion, and people blend together to form harmony. This unique blend serves as a root for the creation of what has developed and grown into a truly wonderful arts and crafts industry. Please visit Bali Handicraft's Blog that related with culture, arts and craft.

The global market place for Indonesian handicrafts
Indonesian handicrafts have continued to gain in popularity over the years. They have earned a dominant place in the highly competitive international giftware and furnishings market place. Millions of dollars of handicrafts are now being exported all over the globe annually to gift shops, supermarkets, department stores, wholesalers, importers and distributors. ArtsBali.com supplies quality Bali handicrafts to such entities and currently exports to at least forty countries all over the globe.

Human resources and empowerment
Bali handicraft industry has thrived and it now provides employment and business opportunities for quite literally thousands of people. In addition to providing a livelihood for those in the handicraft industry, it has given a big boost to the economy. To appreciate how the handicraft industry functions and provides a living for so many people, you have to go off into the hills, far off the beaten track. You will find Balinese communities who are working hard turning bits of wood, bamboo, metal, leaves, and clay into truly amazing and marketable products.

The supply of Bali handicraft
We use the Internet and direct promotion campaigns to keep the handicraft industry alive in Indonesia and provides many of the home industry manufacturers with a channel to sell their arts and craft wares. Many handicraft products that we supply are the creations of the highly skilled artisans. To this end, we look forward to continuing our drive to keep supporting the communities of Indonesia by helping them to bring their unique skills and crafts to the world market place.

Come on in and see for yourself all the handicrafts that Indonesia has to offer. You'll be truly amazed!

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Handycraft in bali


Balinese Design is an online bali handicraft shop. Balinese design is sourcing most of Bali, and so is able to supply a very wide range of products. These include Bali Gazebo, homewares, handicrafts, statues, fabrics and more of other bali handicrafts.
Balinese design demonstrates them desire to source and supply whatever products them customers may require
Personalised shopping tours can be arranged for customer, These will take in visits to suppliers in the Kuta, Denpasar ,Ubud and other part of Bali.
Balinese design is familiar with the import requirements of European, American and Australian customs departments. We have experience shipping and exporting to these and other countries
Choose our Bali handicraft product and make an order now we will do the Best

Monday, June 23, 2008

Bali Product Handycraft

Greetings from Bali Handicraft ProductBali Handicraft Product proudly put forward Balinese hands skills that were unique with the newest design. All of our Bali Handicraft Products were made by the professional craftsman, by using only quality materials was highest. We were your Bali-Indonesia Handicraft partner, we were prepared to co-operate with the importer, the broker, and the distributor from all over the world.We offered the best quality, the best price and the price of bargaining handicraft we were negotiations where we guaranteed the cheapest price. If you were looking for the thing Bali Handicraft please was looked for by you at Bali Handicraft Catalogue, that was the source from various Bali Handicrafts and you would find.

Bali Music and Dance

Bali Music and DanceMusic, dance and drama are all closely related in Bali, in fact drama and dance are synonymous. The most important thing about Balinese dances, however, is that they're fun and accessible. Balinese dances are not hard to find; there are dances virtually every night at all the tourist centers.
The GamelanBalinese music is based around an instrument known as the gamelan. The gamelan is such a central part of Balinese music that the whole 'orchestra' is also referred to as a gamelan. Gamelan music is almost completely percussion. Though it sounds strange at first with its noisy, jangly percussion it's exciting and enjoyable.
KecakProbably the best known of the many Balinese dances, the Kechak is also unusual in that it does not have a gamelan accompaniment. Instead the background is provided by a chanting 'choir' of men who provide the 'chak-a-chak-a-chak' noise.
Tourists especially enjoy the performance staged by the Kechak dancers. This dance is also deeply rooted in local tradi- tion and Indian mythology and is inspired by Ramayana, an epic poem written in Sanskrit. The dance brings to life the tale of King Rama, his wife Dewi Sita and his brother Laksamana who were exiled to the forest for 14 years following some complex scheming in a struggle for power. In the forest, they are persecuted by Rahwana, the ogre king who then abducts Dewi Sita and makes her a prisoner of his palace on the Island of Lanka (Ceylon). Rama strikes an alliance with the monkey people whose army de- feats Rahwana’s troups, making it possible for King Rama to rescue his wife. In each Kechak performance, a hundred or so dancers play the monkey army while a few female dancers are assigned specific roles (Dewi Sita, Trijata). The performance generally lasts one hour and takes place in the evening, preferably around 7 PM.
Barong & RangdaIt's the most popular dance for tourists. A straightforward battle between good, the barong, and bad, the rangda. The barong is a strange creature, half shaggy dog, half lion, propelled by two men like a circus clown-horse. The widow-witch rangda is bad though and certainly not the sort of thing you'd like to meet on a midnight stroll through the rice paddies.
The Barong dance is truly a triumphant display of bright colors and graceful movements. Greatly appreciated by the tourists, special performances are staged for their benefit, generally in the morning, and last one hour. The villages of Batubulan as well as Tegaltamu and Singapadu, small towns located 30 minutes from the capital, are known for putting on the best performances. There is, however, more to the Barong dance than the folkloristic dimension, It is, in fact, an integral part of the island's culture and has an evident sacred connotation. It isn't rare, in fact, to see the Balinese dancing the Barong during their religious ceremonies, regardless of the presence of tourists. Inspired by an episode taken from Mahabharata, an epic poem written in Sanskrit. the dance evolves around the character of the Barong, the king of the jungle. A mythical animal, not clearly identified (perhaps a lion), he is the symbol of virtue and good, subject to the continuous struggle against the evil forces that threaten life and the integrity of the forest, this being an element very dear to the Balinese population. In detail, the Barong embodies everything that can be beneficial to man, and help him defeat illness. black magic and any other kind of misfortune. The evil entity against which he must relentlessly fight is personified by Rangda, queen of death and devourer of children. She is characterized by a dark and gloomy mask from which a red tongue of fire hangs. The entire dance is centered around the struggle between these two rival characters. The Barong is interpreted by two dancers whose rhythmic movements bring to life the beautiful and elaborate cos tume they wear. a large animal head skillfully carved out of wood, brightly colored in red, white, black and gold. It is adorned with a crown extending outwards from the sides of the head, and by a prominent necklace which hangs from the neck, The final touch of the costume is a tail made out of bison leather which is elaborately finished and guilded. The first character to appear on the stage is the Barong with his swaying gait: his dance is meant to express the joy of living. He is followed by a group of armed supporters who stand ready to defend him.
When Rangda strikes her terrible blows. It isn't at all rare for the dancers playing the Barong's followers to become so engrossed in the sacredness of the per- formance that they go into a real trance. A cloud of characters surround the Barong on stage. Rangda, goddess of death, personification of evil, the young girl servant Kalika; Dewi Kunti, queen of the kingdom of Hastina and her stepson Sadewa who will be sacrificed in order to placate the anger of Rangda, the minister Dewi Kunti; Patih who ex- presses sorrow for the fate of Sadewa (Rangda will have to enter his soul in order to make him accept the sacrifice), and then the monkey supporters of the Barong, producers of palm tree wine (nira). A very important element in the entire dance is the large orchestra, known as gamelan, which is essential to underscore the ritual nature of the performance. Many are the instruments that make up the orchestra: some metal xylophones which stand out not only because they are so numerous but because of their power ful and imperious sound; there are also drums as well as flutes, the rebab (a type of violin) and the gender (typical xylophones). All together, these instruments are essential in guiding the dance and underscoring the rhythm of well coordinated movements. These along with the joyful colors are the most alluring elements of this remarkable perfor mance. At the end of the dance, the masks of the Barong and of Rangda, as proof of their sacred nature, are stowed in a special room inside the temple. They are covered very carefully, especially Rangda's mask, because its deadly powers are greatly feared. It's a way of saying that the ritual victory of the Barong, that is of good, which marks the end of the dance, is only temporary: tomorrow the eternal and unresolved conflict could begin again.
The end of the Barong dance is like an entirely separate performance. Also known as the Kris dance, it is named after the famous Malese dagger. The idea is based on the philosophical concept rwa bhineda. good and bad, evil and goodness which have always been present and have always existed together albeit in a constant and inevitably unre solved conflict. Nothing will change in the future. While man is left free to try to develop his positive attitudes and let them win over the negative ones, he must nonetheless resign himself to the fact that the presence of both good and evil is a law of nature and as such must be accepted. When the dance is performed, Rangda is the evil spirit which enters the bodies of his victims, usually followers of the Barong, and pushes them to the edge of suicide. The dancers attempt to stab themselves in the chest with their krises until they are finally stopped by the beneficial appearance of the Barong. It is he who will save these unfortunate beings by revealing that the notion of good and evil will always be inevitably present in the world and in everyone's life and that they must therefore accept it.
Keris DanceIn the Barong play, Bali's mythical guardian, Barong, battles Rangda, the demon - Queen. barong's supporters are a group of Balinese men with the natural ability to enter a trance state. They are armed with a kris ( traditional sword). Rangda insults Barong and taunts the menenraged and in a trance they attack her! But her powers are so strong that they are knocked out. When they come to they are so distressed by their failure, that they try to impale themselves on their kris. But their trance state amazingly protects them from injury.
LegongIt's the most graceful of Balinese dances. A legong dancer is known as young girl, often as young as eight or nine years, rarely older than her early teens. There are various forms of the Legong but the Legong Kraton is the one most often performed.
BarisThe warrior dance, known as the Baris, is traditionally a male equivalent of the Legong femininity and grace give way to energetic and warlike martial spirit.
Ramayana BalletBasically, it tells the same story of Rama and Sita as told in the Kechak but without the monkey ensemble and with a normal gamelan gong accompaniment.
KebyarIt's a male solo dance like the Baris but with greater emphasis on the performer's individual abilities. There are various forms of Kebyar including the Kebyar Duduk and Kebyar Trompong.
Barong LandungThe giant puppet dance take place annually on the island of Pulau Serangan and a few other places in southern Bali.
JangerThe Janger is a relatively new dance which suddenly popped up in the '20s and '30s. Today it has become part of the standard repertoire and no longer looks so unusual.
TopengA mask dance where the dancers have to imitate the character represented by mask. A full collection of Topeng masks may number 30 or 40. Closely liriked to religious ceremonies and processions, and danced as a ritual interval, the Topeng dance ultimately takes on a sacred connotation. As a matter of fact, foreigners are allowed to see the dance only if they behave appropriately and respectfully. Actually, some performances are staged only for the benefit of the tourists, but do not enjoy the same following of the Barong and Kechak dances. Peculiar components of the Topeng dance are the masks used to hide the faces of the dancers. Specific attributes are used, instead, to identify the characters (a mustache and thick eyebrows for the elder, arrogance and defiance for Patih, and so on). The rhythm of movements (perfectly in accordance to the age and role of the character) is underscored by a large orchestra, the garnelan, which is essential for the success of the performance.
JaukAlso a mask dance but strictly a solo performance.
PendetIt's an everyday dance of the temples, a small procedure to go through before making temple offerings.
Sanghyang (Fire Dance)The Sanghyang trance dance originally developed to drive out evil spirits from a village. The Sanghyang Dedari dance is performed by two young girls who dance a dream-like version of the Legong but with their eyes closed. The Sanghyang Jaran, a boy dances around and through a fire, riding a coconut palm hobby-horse. In both dances, a priest is always on hand to help bring the dancers out of theri trance -state at the end of the performance.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Bali Temple

Over a thousand years old, Temple is known as the "pray for the gods" Perched on the every pure place. Named of the gods that we pray is depand on the day we praying
Bali have much temple.every province we have temple,every mountains we have temple,and every house we have small temple that we call sanggah and merajan but it's speciall for hindu religion.
Shiva, Brahma, and Vishnu, is name of our gods .shiva is god of air,brahma is god of fire and wisnu is god of water. The biggest temple is Besakih located at Karangasem Regency, eastcoast Bali. A climb north, through the astonishing landscapes of Bukit Jambul, ascends over 900 meters up the slopes of Gunung Agung to Pura Besakih, the holiest of all temples in Bali.the weather there is so cool.