Nisha Designs- Our Purpose- Magick and Symbolism of Natural Textile Fibers and Fabrics

“The One” questions why are you here on my planet, in my universe? to do what? If you exists you are here with a purpose. Is your purpose to create joy, happiness, love, kindness and gratitude for my services and sources and resources that I am providing you or are you here to destroy my planet? what is it to you?

“If you are not a solution to my the planet and my well being than you are a problem to my planet”

Divine Mother Goddess Gaea

Every atom, molecule of energy, every choice, every action, every movement, every living and non living sentient beings, every breadth we take, every beat of our hearts has a purpose. Our physical body’s every cell, orgas, systems, our auras, our astro body, energy field every part of who we are have a purpose. We are created and born with a mission, a purpose and are already provided for everything we need, want and desire to fulfill our purpose. And in the grand scheme of things because we are the microcosm of the macrocosm all of our purpose in whoever we are and whatever we do is to serve only one purpose; that is to serve the greater good of the planet.

And so our purpose at Nisha Designs is to share, introduce, sell and bring our focus, time and energy to meaningful awareness of self and soul. What makes our planet earth and its sources and resources beautiful, purposeful and magickal. How do these amazing art of natural plants, trees, flora and fauna of the planet provide us the wealth, abundance and prosperity in our day to day living. And how there presence in our lives, in our living room, dining room, chairs, table windows create an ambiance of love, balance, positivity, radiant health and harmony. With there presence in our environment, our surroundings they make us feel at peace and at home.

And to feel the energy and understand what is provided for us we must firstly know its nature, its energy and who they are, what they do and what is there magickal purpose for us. And to have them show us how to make use of them in creating products that are beneficial to serving the greater good of the planet earth. After all they are the providers of what we seek, need, want and desire to create. As in every blade of grass, every breadth of air, every spark of fire and every drop of water has the energy of a Divine. Divine Mother Goddess Gaea.

I have found that not knowing the planets sources and resources, its energy, the being of the planet who is responsible and the purpose of her creation creates lack of knowledge and awareness and that leads to misinformation, dishonesty, travesty, destruction and misusing of the planets sources and resources and hence we have a situation of climate change, greed on food and products that are made from planets sources and resources. And anything made from planets sources and resources are for its people provided by the planet and to that everyone has the right to food, to clothing, to home to everything we need to live comfortably here. That is what the planet provides. But instead of focusing on the Divine Being of the planet and what she provides for us we have made our focus, time and energy to beings and things that are not providing us a comfortable life that we have the right to.

Shift your focus, time, energy, awareness to the planet and its well being. And you will live comfortably and you will be supported and provided for. Otherwise one will struggle. Because the being responsible, in charge and in control of the planet earth is the Divine Mother Gaea. But if you go to ‘beings and things we call humans’ that is not the true creator of the planet then you will always struggle, you will always feel lack and separate from everyone and that is the choice you made. No one made it for you. So choose wisely.

And so here at Nisha Designs we bring our self and soul’s magickal and spiritual knowledge, awareness of our divine Mother Earth Gaea’s magnificent creations. So if one wants, needs, desires, chooses now have the ability to change and serve the greater good and be part of her planet, rejoice in her creations not be separate.

We look forward to hearing from you on our beautiful textiles and products.

Hemp Linen Fabrics- Nisha Designs

Our 100%Hemp summer cloths, are the perfect linen.

From shear, light weight, medium weight and our heavy open weave weight. Linen is very strong, absorbent, and dries faster than cotton.

While also adding the performance and benefits of 100%Hemp. Making our Hemp Linen’s perfect for garments, homeware, reusable filters, nut milk bags and much more..

Historically Linen was made from Flax, another long bast fiber. Although in today’s textile market when referring to “Linen” is it to represent the weave structure and should be noted what the content may be.

It also has other distinctive characteristics, notably its tendency to wrinkle. Depending on the weight and tightness of the weave, we do recommend washing or dying to tighten the weave and complete your perfect fit or size. Our 100%Hemp will greatly soften to the hand and soften the weave once finished.

Many often refer to our Hempcel® Fabrics, as a soft high-end linen.

HEMP CERTIFICATIONS AND TRANSPARENCY. To know more about our fabrics, want to order our sample swatches? Please call or email us to Nisha Desai at nisha@nishadesigns.com or call 702.622.8321

Afro-Cuban artist reimagines Renaissance art with Black people at the center-CNN-Nisha Designs

Currently on display at the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art in Atlanta, the exhibit "Harmonia Rosales: Master Narrative" entwines West African religion and art techniques of the Renaissance period. Pictured here: Rosales' work "The Birth of Oshun."

Currently on display at the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art in Atlanta, the exhibit “Harmonia Rosales: Master Narrative” entwines West African religion and art techniques of the Renaissance period. Pictured here: Rosales’ work “The Birth of Oshun.”Lucy Garrett/Harmonia Rosales CNN  — 

Consider Michelangelo’s famous “Creation of Adam,” Sandro Botticelli’s “The Birth of Venus” or Leonardo da Vinci’s “The Last Supper.” When you think of Western art’s grand visual narratives of humanity’s inception — and all its triumphs, beauty, tragedies and meaning — they likely look very White.

This is because, for centuries, the artistic traditions of the European Renaissance have been the authority of such themes. It was from the 15th to 16th century that “art came to be seen as a branch of knowledge,” according to Britannica, “valuable in its own right and capable of providing man with images of God and his creations as well as with insights into man’s position in the universe.”

But Afro-Cuban American artist Harmonia Rosales is among those seeking to radically change this centering of Western ideologies as standard. A selection of her work in this vein is currently on display in the exhibition “Harmonia Rosales: Master Narrative” at the Spelman College Museum of Fine Art in Atlanta. (A version of the exhibition was first shown last year at the AD&A Museum at the University of California, Santa-Barbara.)

At the core of Rosales’ art is the idea that “storytelling is a journey of personal discovery and a reclamation of one’s cultural identity."

At the core of Rosales’ art is the idea that “storytelling is a journey of personal discovery and a reclamation of one’s cultural identity.”Elon Schoenholz/Harmonia Rosales

Across 20 oil paintings and a large-scale sculptural installation, Rosales’ work challenges viewers to consider the universality of creation through a Black diasporic lens. The exhibition features seven years’ worth of work, as Rosales entwines the artistic techniques and hegemonies of European Old Masters, focused on Christianity and Greco-Roman mythology, with the characters, themes and stories of the Yorùbá religion.

Yorùbá faith tradition involves a supreme creator named Olodumare and a hierarchy of several hundred deities — orishas — who collectively rule over the world and humankind. Originating in Western Africa at least a few thousand years ago, enslaved people were prohibited from practicing the faith as many White slave masters perceived it as evil, and a threat to the obedience they desired.

"'Ori' is the Yorùbá term for 'head' and denotes both the top of the skull and the notion of personal destiny divinely embodied within it," says a museum plaque for Rosales' work of the same name.

“‘Ori’ is the Yorùbá term for ‘head’ and denotes both the top of the skull and the notion of personal destiny divinely embodied within it,” says a museum plaque for Rosales’ work of the same name.Lucy Garrett/Harmonia Rosales

Renaissance art largely excluded Black people, even as it emerged during the early phases of the transatlantic slave trade which ultimately brought 10.7 million African men, women and children to the Americas — some 1.67 million of whom were Yorùbá followers.

So why center Black people in an artform that ostracized them, rather than creating an entirely new space to convey this “master narrative?” For Rosales, the best way to diversify the medium is to operate from within its parameters.

“Because it’s what’s been mainstreamed. I’m trying to educate the masses on a religion that has been hidden for quite some time,” Rosales said. “I want to make it very linear, understandable and digestible, so then we can dive deeper.”

“I’m taking the express route of teaching people who they are,” she added. “The only way to do that is by reimagining certain famous images.”

“What she’s doing is different than a lot of people working in Black figuration right now,” said Liz Andrews, executive director of the Spelman College Museum of Art, of Rosales’ work. “This is recuperating a history that has been actively stabbed out.”

Finding her artistic flair

With her mixed ancestry, which also includes Jamaican roots, Rosales said she “never felt like I was enough of anything” while growing up. She didn’t fit into one racial or ethnic box, and struggled with wanting to change certain physical features society historically hasn’t considered attractive — such as naturally curly and kinky hair, which, for years, she straightened with chemical hair relaxers gifted from her grandmother, or elbows and knees becoming darker than the rest of her body.

Growing up in Chicago, Rosales tried her hand at art school but didn’t like the constraints she felt it placed on her creative instincts. So she found her inspiration instead in art books, research and museums, where she could closely observe paintings to study techniques — in particular those of Renaissance artists. “There was time (and) love put into Renaissance art, and it shows within the work,” Rosales said, describing it as “the framework of American beauty, perception of beauty, everything.”

As a self-taught artist, Rosales first became well known after sharing her painting “The Creation of God” (pictured below) on social media in 2017.

In Rosales' "Creation of God," God is a Black woman.

In Rosales’ “Creation of God,” God is a Black woman.Lucy Garrett/Harmonia Rosales

In the years since, Rosales has seen her work displayed at the Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Art in Brooklyn and the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, among other venues.

Rethinking conditioning

When Rosales had her first child, she recalled being excited to have a “little me,” just as in awe of art museums — and particularly Renaissance art. But when Rosales first took her daughter, then age 4 or 5 years old, to a gallery showcasing works from the period, it fell flat.

“I was like, ‘Why don’t you like this?’” Rosales said, referring to a particular portrait. “She goes, ‘She doesn’t look like me.’”

“I re-saw (the art) with innocent eyes, without all the different manipulations society puts on you about what you should look like,” she added. “I don’t want my daughter to be brainwashed like I was … I want her to love her hair, her skin, her lips, her nose, everything.”

In addition to creating grand narratives her children can see themselves in, the desire to empower and represent the beauty and strength of Black women is also reflected throughout Rosales’ oeuvre.

Rosales' work demonstrates her journey towards empowerment and self-love, with figures in her artworks painted with features she used to dislike about herself.

Rosales’ work demonstrates her journey towards empowerment and self-love, with figures in her artworks painted with features she used to dislike about herself.Courtesy Harmonia Rosales

“I wanted to visually depict women of color, specifically — because I’m a woman — as something of pure power,” Rosales said.

Many of the people in Rosales’ artworks have dark skin, often with blue-black tones and sometimes silvery elements that impart their majestic, mythological nature.

Viewed in person, the figures in her paintings appear so real it’s almost as if you could reach out and touch them. This effect was intentional, embracing a technique employed by European Old Masters for painting White skin in a way that made it glow and stand out from the canvas; it involves layering thin coats of paint so that lighting highlights different features and creates depth, Rosales said. What’s divergent about Rosales’ take is the mixture of colors involved — an array of browns, blacks, reds, greens and blues — to capture the diversity of more melanated skin tones.

The physical diversity of the African diaspora is represented, as well. There are curvaceous and slender women; lighter skinned people with blonde hair, albinism or freckles; and brown-skinned characters with red tresses and vitiligo, a condition that causes patches of skin to lose pigment or color when melanin-producing cells are destroyed.

‘Putting our perspective into the grand narrative’

“Because we were either killed or punished, to worship Yorùbá gods we had to hide them in these White masks for so long that, generation after generation, we forgot who was actually behind that mask,” Rosales said of Yorùbá followers’ practice of conflating their gods with important Catholic figures with similar meanings, so they could covertly worship.

Rosales' "Lady of Regla."

Rosales’ “Lady of Regla.”Courtesy Harmonia Rosales

The exhibition examines this dynamic in portraits like Rosales “Lady of Regla.” A plaque for this piece in the Spelman’s exhibition explains, “The Catholic Virgin of Regla, the only Black Mary figure in Cuba, is often conflated with the orisha Yemaya, mother of all and goddess of the ocean in the Americas.”

The piece is a luxurious rendering of Yemaya in lavish blue drapery (the same garb often worn by the Virgin Mary), holding her daughter, the infant Eve, in place of Christ, and surrounded by lush blooming flowers.

“Over time, the orishas and saints became fused through a process known as religious syncretism. In her paintings, Rosales alludes to this syncretism when she depicts the auras (spiritual consciousness and destinies) of the orishas as gold halos, a reminder of the saints to whom they became assimilated,” wrote Helen Morales, a UCSB professor who led the curation of “Master Narrative” in its first iteration, in an exhibition catalog of the same name.

“Migration of the Gods” depicts enslaved Africans carrying their gods on their backs amid “the horrors of the Middle Passage, condensing time and geography into a single painting.”

“Migration of the Gods” depicts enslaved Africans carrying their gods on their backs amid “the horrors of the Middle Passage, condensing time and geography into a single painting.”Lucy Garrett/Harmonia Rosales

“There is a different kind of syncretism at work in many of Rosales’ paintings,” Morales continued. “The syncretism here is also generative, challenging our beauty standards and encouraging us to trace similarities as well as differences between the Greek, Roman, and Yorùbá mythologies. It is part of Rosales’ generosity of spirit and loving vision that she is ultimately as interested in what unites us as in what divides us.”

Wanting to emotionally carry her children displaced to different lands during the slave trade, Yorùbá legend says Yemaya became one with the ocean and is credited with saving the Yorùbá people who survived their journey on slave ships.

Yemaya is also reflected in other works in “Master Narrative,” such as the painting “Ascension into the Waters.” In another, “Yemaya Meets Erinle,” Yemaya’s capacity for desire is depicted as she falls in love with the divine fisherman.

Though Rosales portrays slavery, her paintings also capture the multidimensionality that Black people possess — as in "Yemaya Meets Erinle."

Though Rosales portrays slavery, her paintings also capture the multidimensionality that Black people possess — as in “Yemaya Meets Erinle.”Lucy Garrett/Harmonia Rosales

The titular piece in the exhibit is Rosales’ sculptural re-interpretation of Michelangelo’s famed painting on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. The artwork’s dramatic scenes of essential Biblical stories of creation have long stood as a visual history of humankind’s spiritual development. For Rosales, the exhibition would not have been complete without a recreation of it.

“I didn’t know how I was going to display it,” Rosales said of the creative process that eventually became her first foray into sculpture. “It was like, ‘OK, recreate a chapel ceiling,’ but that is going to go against everything I’m saying. The chapel ceiling is what kind of imprisoned us at first — the aspect of forcing a religion for everybody to follow.”

“They’ve been with us all along,” Rosales said of the Yorùbá gods depicted on her installation "Master Narrative." “They traveled the Atlantic with us — we helped them survive and they helped us survive.”

“They’ve been with us all along,” Rosales said of the Yorùbá gods depicted on her installation “Master Narrative.” “They traveled the Atlantic with us — we helped them survive and they helped us survive.”Lucy Garrett/Harmonia Rosales

Stretched instead across the concave hull of an overturned slave ship, “Master Narrative” is a bold act of reclamation, drawing on Rosales’ rich oeuvre to capture the creation of the orishas and Earth, its people and the stories of their lives.

A similar theme is found in “Still We Rise,” a large composition named after the Maya Angelou poem and modeled after Michelangelo’s fresco “The Last Judgment,” which covers the altar wall of the Sistine Chapel. The flayed skin of Saint Bartholomew, in Michelangelo’s painting, is swapped for a burning Confederate flag that suggests those enslaved in the Americas will “emerge triumphant.”

“I just switched it out to the burning of the flag because I wanted to have more of a positive — that this flag, that was putting us in a box and telling us what to do and what to believe in, is now being destroyed,” Rosales explained of her painting "The Last Judgment."

“I just switched it out to the burning of the flag because I wanted to have more of a positive — that this flag, that was putting us in a box and telling us what to do and what to believe in, is now being destroyed,” Rosales explained of her painting “The Last Judgment.”Lucy Garrett/Harmonia Rosales

Her exhibition also occurs amid both a broader cultural moment of Black people reclaiming their place in history and owning their heritage, and of pushback against the retelling of this history. Rosales said she doesn’t intend for her work to be utilized as a tool for or against either of these movements, but is happy if it adds to such empowerment.

“Why is seeing us as godly political?” Rosales argued. “Why is adding our narratives — or even trying to alter the story, this foundation that was built and didn’t include us — political?”

“I just see it as, I’m telling something that is part of my culture that I would like to see more of,” she added. “These are my children, and when I let them out into the world, they decide who they want to become.”

Though Rosales initially painted the figures for her daughter, ultimately “I found myself,” she said, “I became empowered about who I am. Every one of these (artworks) tells my stories.”

“Harmonia Rosales: Master Narrative” is on display at the Spelman College Museum of Art in Atlanta through December 2.

Source: https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/17/style/harmonia-rosales-master-narrative-renaissance-exhibit/index.html?fbclid=IwAR3jA8b2z-uCI-dHmjDbtImBNVx-0VIAZMgH_56KwAb0IPQvflN2u94kxdU

Bast Collection- Hemp Twill- Nisha Designs

SKU B667: Natural Hempcel® Twill Fabric, 55% Hemp, 45% Lyocell, Width 57/58″, 9oz. Hydro Semi-Bleached. Pre-Shrunk. SBP® Product.

For more information email or call us to nisha@nishadesigns.com or 702.622.8321

Art-The Elemental Collection-Fire, Earth, Water and Air- Nisha Designs

The Elemental Collection: This collection is designed to honor the presence of the primal forces of life, these beings are called The Elementals. The energy of natures expression. The beings of EARTH are called The GNOME. The beings of WATER are called UNDINE. The being of AIR are called SYLPH and the being of FIRE are called SALAMANDER. These elementals are the building blocks of nature. They exist in every aspect of nature and within every person. We cannot exist if any of these elements are missing from our life. They charge and energize us. They provide the fuel we need to feel alive. They work with every aspect of our being. Learning and being aware of them is the key to bring balance to every aspect of our life within and around us. If one is overly active then other it causes an imbalance.

The collection is designed organically to capture the essence of these magnificent beings bringing an awareness of the expression of nature through design.

I would encourage and invite everyone to learn and read about the Elementals. The more we understand them the better we can create a sustainable world. They are here to help and guide us to bring balance within ourselves. We are not separate we all are connected as one. It is our responsibility as a citizen of the world to learn to work with nature, be responsible for nature’s sources and resources which is within us and around us.

This collection is sold in all kinds of products. You can buy them at: https://society6.com/nishadesai1

Custom design is also available. Please contact for further details at nisha@nishadesigns.com

Internet source is Ravenhawks’ https://ravenhawksmagazine.net

Hemp to Hardwood- Hemp Flooring- Nisha Designs

How is HempWood® Natural Flooring Made?

The process of creating HempWood® Natural Flooring starts in the field. All hemp is sourced within 100 miles of the factory from local farmers. After the hemp is collected, a plant-based adhesive is used to bind full-length fiber hemp stalks. After the hemp stalks and plant-based adhesive are combined, the material is compressed and baked to form HempWood® Blocks.

From the Blocks, 4mm HempWood® veneers are cut for the top layer of the engineered flooring.
For the substrate, a 5-layer PureBound® Hardwood Plywood is used. The plywood is ethically sourced from Columbia Forest Products, which is located in West Virginia. By using PureBound® Plywood, we are able to maintain our eco-friendly mission and support the American economy.

After cutting the veneers and ripping the plywood, our flooring is assembled with the help of our PUR glue line. After adhering the HempWood® veneer to the Purebond® Plywood, a tongue and groove profile is cut into the flooring.

The boards are then sanded, finished, and surveyed for any blemishes. Our quality control team hand checks each board and ensures that our flooring upholds our standard of hardness, durability, and beauty.

Explore Our Wool Collection- Nisha Designs

Want to buy, use a more sustainable fabric for your home and draperies that is inherently Fire Retardent. Explore our Wool Collection at Nishadesigns.com. If you desire to create your own wool collection email or call Nisha@nishadesigns.com