December 11, 2010

AromaYoga®

Click on title to read an interview with Tanja Bochnig by Jinjee Talifero for Pear Magazine Online, ~ who promotes fresh organic lifestyles.

2008 summer picture of Tanja near Puna coast while visiting Delia.

Contact Delia with any April Aromatics (a/k/a Tanja's Potions) wholesale order queries from anywhere, and feel free to send queries about which items are the best match for your professional interest.

July 26, 2010

Yoga and Aroma


In summary, Aroma Yoga combines and intensifies the holistic effect of yoga with the application of essential oils. That creates a synergistic marriage of two teachings which are seemingly perfect in themselves.

Contact Delia for AromaYoga and all products from Tanja's Potions in a digital wholesale catalog.

June 23, 2010

Fashionable Jewelry Made from Trash

Designer Victoria Spleet-Lenz magnates positive astonished reactions when people find out her jewelry is created from recyclables. She individually hand-crafts every item with recycled aluminum pop and juice cans. Each piece is exclusive, elegant and unique.

Victoria doesn’t mass produce. In fact, all items are individually handcrafted. Her earth-friendly Eco-Accessories™ are made from recycled plastic pop bottles and aluminum cans. The Pop-Drops™ are earrings made from recycled aluminum pop and juice containers. New designs are always taking place and the latest is Flutter-By-Butterfly Earrings.

Every element that goes into every one of Victoria's creations is carefully selected. This takes time, but the result is that each handmade item is as unique as the woman who wears it.

Fashion Counts by Victoria is her company title. This hot jewelry artist is not easy to find if you're far from her Michigan home state. And although making jewelry is her long-time passion, her day gig is as a special education teacher. That leaves little to zero time for marketing and as a result, she prefers to collaborate with sales reps.

The grape vine spread when Carol Alt, model and actress, praised Victoria's jewelry. Additional admirers included PBS Television, Vegetarian Times, Plenty Magazine, Environmental News Network, The Ann Arbor News, and an exhibit at The National Plastics Center & Museum. Typical receptive descriptions were clever, ingenious, and earth-friendly.

Retail buyers for specialty stores and sales reps are welcome to ask me for Victoria's wholesale catalog. Individual buyers are welcome too.

Meanwhile, I hope Victoria's creations inspire designers everywhere. This is one beautiful person who makes a big difference. Accordingly, I quote Sonia Johnson: "We must remember that one determined person can make a significant difference, and that a small group of determined people can change the course of history."



April 28, 2010

Tagua Heaven from Equador

A tagua nut sure has a lot of names. Like The Rain Forest Ivory or Vegetable Ivory. Other titles are Corozo (also spelled Corrozzo), Binroji Nut (Japanese), Steinnuss (German), and Coquilla Nut. A tagua nut is the fruit of a palm tree, primarily Phytelephas macrocarpa, which flourishes in tropical rain forests from Paraguay to Panama.

Natives in Equador replant palm trees for their seeds instead of logging them, which helps save the rain forests. They polish the shell of the seeds and carve them into shape. Results are buttons, jewelry beads and carvings, to name a few.

Where tagua nuts grow high up in South American palms, there are about 40 shelled seeds to a cluster, called a cabeza. Harvesting them appears totally harmless to trees and forests. Tagua vendors can toot their horn for indirectly saving elephants, whales, walrus and other species. Humans are so fortunate to have a natural, organic, resourceful product in plentiful supply.

There are other interesting facts about tagua nuts. Twenty percent of all buttons were made of tagua nuts in the 1920's. Ecuador continues to offer tagua buttons and enjoys a thriving tagua jewelry market too. I refer to this supplier as Tagua Heaven.

When it comes to color shading, the nut has swirl patterning that makes colors more varied and interesting. That especially makes buttons and jewelry pieces uniquely attractive. Whether swirled or solid, lovely carvings and utilitarian objets d'art are made from tagua.

Additional popular items are wine corks, key chains, dice, dominoes and chess pieces. Look further to find cane and umbrella handles, pipes, tiles, and sewing needle cases. Such pieces are often made by the fine art of scrimshaw.

Feel free to ask for images and prices for buttons, jewelry (items or finished pieces), or anything else that can be made from tagua. Bless a natural, organic, resourceful product in plentiful supply!