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Ayindisa, Llc - Socially Responsible Artisan Handcrafts Featured
Socially Responsible Retailer Comes To Ridgefield,...
January, 2009 @ 1888PressRelease.com

Saturday, May 31, 2008

African Decor - 6 Ways To Add An African Touch To Your Home

The below article can be found at parentingtoddlersandteens.com. I don't usually quote entire posts from other blogs but I believe this one is very informative and will help you when designing a new room, adding to an already existing one, or mixing up the themes in your home. Also, this article applies perfectly to the products Ayindisa is offering at http://www.ayindisa.com/.

Enjoy!



African Decor - 6 Ways To Add An African Touch To Your Home

Sadly, many won’t get the chance to head to Africa on safari for one reason or the other but that doesn’t mean you still cannot experience the atmosphere a safari has to offer.

There has been a “silent craze” lurking in our society and it’s certainly gathering momentum. There’s little doubt African decor has become a passion for many hobbyists and they’re not only collecting it but are putting it to very good use. In fact, African décor adorns many homes in not only the USA, but many other western cultures.

It’s particularly popular among children who are looking to create an African safari setting in their own bedrooms. And it seems parents are obliging in a big way.
Parents are going online in droves looking for ideas to decorate their kid’s rooms but the truth is, you don’t need to spend a fortune doing it.

African Décor Decoration

Yes, you could head to the nearest exotic shop and buy African decor but if you are on a budget, then this cost could become rather prohibitive.
Let’s take a look a few ideas to turn your son’s or daughter’s room into a safari setting.

6 African Décor Ideas

- For the effect of vines, material such as braided twine is relatively inexpensive and by heading down to your nearest dollar store, you can pick up either green paper or garland and create a leafy look. Simply hang your vines from the ceiling.

- For animal effect, head down to your nearest charity store and pick up toys which would match an African setting. Lions, monkeys giraffes - as long as they are native to Africa. Yard sales are another great place to pick up old toys on the cheap.

- Bamboo and palm plants are excellent for creating a more realistic jungle effect.

- Transform a layer of netting into a hummock and put it in a corner of the room.

- African ornaments such as drums, spears and shields may take a little finding at the right price but can only give the room more Africa-style flavor. This is true African decor and worth looking for.

- Cut out animal pictures from books and paste them around the room. Use animal covered wrapping paper to decorate further and use a safari hat and a pair of binoculars for further effect.

These are simple suggestions you can put to use. Remember, it doesn’t have to be done all at once and could become an ongoing project for the kids.

Copyright © ParentingToddlersAndTeens



Please visit the Ayindisa website to see our high end African home decor, handcrafts, and art.



Kyle W. Gay
Director of Marketing, Ayindisa, LLC
Socially Responsible Artisan Handcrafts
42 Lake Ave, Ext. Suite 285
Danbury CT, 06811
e: KyleG@ayindisa.com
w: http://www.ayindisa.com/
b: ayindisallc.blogspot.com/

Thursday, May 29, 2008

New African Handcrafts for 2008!

"Ma akye!", or "Good morning" Everyone! (from the Ghanaian language Twi)

As I am getting ready to move back to the United States from Ghana in two weeks, I am beginning to reflect on this beautiful Ghanaian culture and pride myself that I have been able to help so many artisans. It amazes me that working for Ayindisa originally started when I chose to use Ayindisa, llc – socially responsible artisan handcrafts as a case study for a business term paper some time ago. Now, a year and a half later, working at Ayindisa, llc helping artisans improve their lives and giving you the finest African home decor, crafts, and art available has become a passion and life mission of mine.

Since I am moving back to the USA, many brainstorming sessions are taking place over deciding who will be the point man/woman here in Ghana, and I am excited to announce that since Ayindisa has grown so much over the years, even individuals who started as artisans working for Ayindisa are being discussed as potential candidates. The fact that a person can go from an uneducated yet sprightly woodcarver to an educated, trained, bilingual, talented and even more amazing of a person in just over a year to the extent they are capable of runing the African branch of a business such as Ayindisa makes me proud to work here.

So with no further ado, the point of this post is to inform you that as I am moving back to Connecticut this June, Ayindisa is introducing up to SIX, yes six new products this summer! These include Ghanaian woodcarvings of Rhino's, Hippo's, and Lion's that are approximately 5" tall by 9" wide, and Elephant and Turtle families that are comprised of 5-6 animals and start at about 3.5" tall. As well, we plan to introduce amazing reversible cooking aprons and table placemats with matching napkins all made from Ghanaian cloth.

Lastly, we are experimenting with a brand new, never before made in Africa handbag. This handbag is a fusion between African cloth, Ghanaian cultural fashion , and Western taste on an organized purse or book bag.

As Chris Gay, founder of Ayindisa and I are here in Ghana right now working on our 2008 fiscal year stocking and product innovation, we plan to present you with a truly amazing group of new, original, affordable, and beautiful collection of products that can suit any individuals needs.
Please come back next week and look for the pictures we are posting! Also, you can e-mail me before then and I can send you pictures ahead of schedule.

Until then, "Nante yiye", or ‘good-bye',


Kyle W. Gay
Director of Marketing, Ayindisa LLC
Socially Responsible Artisan Handcrafts
42 Lake Ave, Ext. Suite 285.
Danbury CT, 06811
e: KyleG@ayindisa.com
w: http://www.ayindisa.com/
b: ayindisallc.blogspot.com/

Monday, May 26, 2008

The Ayindisa Press Room

The following news article is about Ayindisa's founder Chris Gay, how Ayindisa, llc was founded, and presents a fundamental understanding for the overall goals and dreams of the Ayindisa business.



Sale here this weekend Ex-Ridgefielder's business aids African artisans


Author(s): Janet Stevens; Press Correspondent Date: November 29, 2007 Section: Business



How does a kid who struggled through his teenage years become a man who builds a socially responsible business? Christopher Gay created Ayindisa based on fair trade principles and practices, combining his passions for art, music and humanitarian service with African trade.


Ayindisa will be having an Out of Africa trunk sale on Dec. 1 and 2, from 10 to 4, at 690 Ridgebury Road.


Mr. Gay, now 32, went to school in Ridgefield through middle school and sophomore year in high school.


"Teenage years," he says, "were difficult for me, and I finished my high school education in an international boarding school in Arezzo, Italy, graduating with honors. After continuing at San Francisco State University and Southern Utah University, I came back to Ridgefield, graduating this year from SUNY Purchase, cum laude with a bachelor of fine art in sculpture."


He credits his parents, Robert and Lynette Gay, as major influences in what he's doing. "It was my mother who dragged the family, including me, to Ethiopia in 2002, and, without knowing it, changed my life," he said. "We were involved in a humanitarian project, and I simply wasn't prepared for the extreme poverty and suffering that I witnessed."


Since then, he has been working with the Ascend Alliance in the field, developing, leading and participating in projects designed to empower the poor.


Ayindisa


Mr. Gay created Ayindisa LLC after he became friends with an expert drum maker and player in Ghana in 2004. Ayindisa is from the Fra-fra dialect, spoken in a part of northern Ghana, meaning, "God is watching over you ... protecting you ... His hand is guiding all that you do." It officially became a business in the state of Connecticut in August 2006.


"However," said Mr. Gay, "Ayindisa's genesis actually occurred somewhere deep inside of me long before I ever met my new friend, while I was working in a remote African village with people the world seemed to have forgotten. Having spent many days looking into the eyes and holding the hands of thousands of suffering, yet extraordinary and humble, people, I made a promise to God and myself to never forget what I had experienced."


"Through my friendships," he said, "I have been introduced to artisans, craftsmen and musicians, as well as beautiful cultures, that are in direct contrast to some of the horrific things that I've seen and experienced there. It is the opportunity to share this beauty with the world and, in turn, help my friends, families, communities, and people in general that led me to create this socially responsible business based on fair trade principles and practices. It was Ghandi who said, “Be the change that you want to see in the world.'"


Sugarbeads


Doing business online and with merchants such as SugarBeads in Ridgefield, Ayindisa wholesales the African products - djembe drums, Khangas, beads old and new, batiks, clothing, handwoven baskets, tribal masks, and more.


Ayindisa is partnering with organizations such as Cornell University's Green Teen program in Beacon and Poughkeepsie, N.Y., and from $150 teens have earned selling vegetables, will be investing it in a garden project on their behalf either in Mozambique or Ethiopia in cooperation with Ascend Alliance.


"We will also," said Mr. Gay, "be doing some work with the The Foever Young Foundation in January 2008 when I go to Ghana to help them build schools. At that time Ayindisa will be doing some work in conjunction with Komart NGO in Ghana, helping manage loans for students in Africa."


Mr. Gay and his new wife, Chelsea Steinberg-Gay, recently moved to Beacon, N.Y., where they have an art studio and he does social sculpture.


He and his wife will be having an open studio art show on Dec. 8 and 9 at 554 Main St. in Beacon from 1 to 5. In the process of doing a major art project in Africa, they will show the work in New York sometime in 2008.


Copyright, 2007, The Ridgefield Press



Kyle W. Gay
Director of Marketing, Ayindisa LLC
Socially Responsible Artisan Handcrafts
42 Lake Ave, Ext. Suite 285.
Danbury CT, 06811
e: KyleG@ayindisa.com
w: www.ayindisa.com/
b: ayindisallc.blogspot.com





The following news article is about Ghana's minister of chieftaincy, and his visit to Connecticut to discuss the building of the largest cultural center in West Africa. Founder of Ayindisa, Chris Gay is a partner in the project with Isaac Hirt-Manheimer of the Ridgefield Music Conservatory in Connecticut.



Culture minister of Ghana tells Marconi of chieftaincy
Author(s): Macklin Reid; Press Staff


Date: April 24, 2008 Section: News



A Ridgefielder plans for a performing arts center on the west coast of Africa, where American students could go bask in the artistic riches of traditional African culture, led to visit to town by a high official of the nation of Ghana.


Sampson Boafo, Ghana's minister of chieftaincy and culture, was escorted to town hall Isaac Hirt-Manheimer of Enchanted Garden Conservatory for the Arts on Route 7.


Mr. Hirt-Manheimer, who studied African drumming in Ghana as a college student, plans build an arts center there to serve "students interested in spending the summer in Ghana, learning the traditional arts," he said.


He spoke to a small gathering in town hall where Minister Boafo and three other Ghanaians First Selectman Rudy Marconi, Selectwoman Barbara Manners, Ridgefield Council of the Chairwoman Nancy Baldwin and Judith Cook Tucker, a music professor at Western Connecticut State University and head of Connecticut Folklife Project.


In addition to accommodating up to 60 visiting students on four-to five-week stays, the center would help Ghanaian artists practice and preserve their traditional culture and crafts."


The colonial era was devastating, and people were brainwashed into thinking the traditional arts were primitive and backward," Mr. Hirt-Manheimer said.


Now, Westerners' interest in traditional music and culture may help keep the old arts alive.


Colleges such as Wesleyan, Bard and perhaps Western Connecticut are interested in participating, he said.


Ridgefielder Chris Gay, founder and owner of Ayindisa LLC – Socially Responsible Artisan Handcrafts, a African crafts business that supports artisans in Ghana by selling their decorative and artistic items in the U.S., is a partner in the project.


Minister Boafo explained to his hosts in Ridgefield Town Hall how an aspect of Ghana's government - based in tradition, but adapted for modern times - has similarities to America's system of local, state and federal levels of government."


In Ghana almost every village has a chief," he said. "…Every community owes allegiance to a chief."There are paramount chiefs, and sub-chiefs owning fealty to them, down to a chief.


"When there's a dispute, you start locally and then you go to the Regional House of Chiefs and the National House of Chiefs," Mr. Boafo said.


It's similar to the old feudal system of Europe in that chiefs must be from an appropriate family, but are also selected through nominations and approvals of respected kingmakers.


The role of chiefs is traditional, cultural, subordinate to the elected government - parliament, the cabinet, the president - and chiefs are insulated from partisan politics.


"You don't do politics, partisan politics, Mr. Boafo said, "because, in times of crisis, you have to mediate."


"Maybe we should try that," Mr. Marconi said.He told Minister Boafo that Ridgefield, too, was working to enrich its cultural awareness.


"We're come a long way in our community with the arts and culture," he said, "really, to balance our community."



Copyright, 2008, The Ridgefield Press


Please visit ayindisa.com to learn about our work to educate and improve the world.



Kyle W. Gay
Director of Marketing, Ayindisa LLC
Socially Responsible Artisan Handcrafts
42 Lake Ave, Ext. Suite 285.
Danbury CT, 06811
e: KyleG@ayindisa.com
w: http://www.ayindisa.com/
b: ayindisallc.blogspot.com/

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Culture minister of Ghana tells Marconi of chieftaincy

The following news article is about Ghana's minister of chieftaincy, and his visit to Connecticut to discuss the building of the largest cultural center in West Africa. Founder of Ayindisa, Chris Gay is a partner in the project with Isaac Hirt-Manheimer of the Ridgefield Music Conservatory in Connecticut.



Culture minister of Ghana tells Marconi of chieftaincy
Author(s): Macklin Reid; Press Staff


Date: April 24, 2008 Section: News



A Ridgefielder plans for a performing arts center on the west coast of Africa, where American students could go bask in the artistic riches of traditional African culture, led to visit to town by a high official of the nation of Ghana.


Sampson Boafo, Ghana's minister of chieftaincy and culture, was escorted to town hall Isaac Hirt-Manheimer of Enchanted Garden Conservatory for the Arts on Route 7.


Mr. Hirt-Manheimer, who studied African drumming in Ghana as a college student, plans build an arts center there to serve "students interested in spending the summer in Ghana, learning the traditional arts," he said.


He spoke to a small gathering in town hall where Minister Boafo and three other Ghanaians First Selectman Rudy Marconi, Selectwoman Barbara Manners, Ridgefield Council of the Chairwoman Nancy Baldwin and Judith Cook Tucker, a music professor at Western Connecticut State University and head of Connecticut Folklife Project.


In addition to accommodating up to 60 visiting students on four-to five-week stays, the center would help Ghanaian artists practice and preserve their traditional culture and crafts."


The colonial era was devastating, and people were brainwashed into thinking the traditional arts were primitive and backward," Mr. Hirt-Manheimer said.


Now, Westerners' interest in traditional music and culture may help keep the old arts alive.


Colleges such as Wesleyan, Bard and perhaps Western Connecticut are interested in participating, he said.


Ridgefielder Chris Gay, founder and owner of Ayindisa LLC – Socially Responsible Artisan Handcrafts, a African crafts business that supports artisans in Ghana by selling their decorative and artistic items in the U.S., is a partner in the project.


Minister Boafo explained to his hosts in Ridgefield Town Hall how an aspect of Ghana's government - based in tradition, but adapted for modern times - has similarities to America's system of local, state and federal levels of government."


In Ghana almost every village has a chief," he said. "…Every community owes allegiance to a chief."There are paramount chiefs, and sub-chiefs owning fealty to them, down to a chief.


"When there's a dispute, you start locally and then you go to the Regional House of Chiefs and the National House of Chiefs," Mr. Boafo said.


It's similar to the old feudal system of Europe in that chiefs must be from an appropriate family, but are also selected through nominations and approvals of respected kingmakers.


The role of chiefs is traditional, cultural, subordinate to the elected government - parliament, the cabinet, the president - and chiefs are insulated from partisan politics.


"You don't do politics, partisan politics, Mr. Boafo said, "because, in times of crisis, you have to mediate."


"Maybe we should try that," Mr. Marconi said.He told Minister Boafo that Ridgefield, too, was working to enrich its cultural awareness.


"We're come a long way in our community with the arts and culture," he said, "really, to balance our community."



Copyright, 2008, The Ridgefield Press


Please visit ayindisa.com to learn about our work to educate and improve the world.



Kyle W. Gay
Director of Marketing, Ayindisa LLC
Socially Responsible Artisan Handcrafts
42 Lake Ave, Ext. Suite 285.
Danbury CT, 06811
e: KyleG@ayindisa.com
w: http://www.ayindisa.com/
b: ayindisallc.blogspot.com/