Superfolk
Nature-inspired, handcrafted homewares from Ireland since 2010.
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It’s acorn season, and we’ve been out in the forest collecting some acorns to sprout at home.
So this week over on our Journal we are sharing how to select, store, germinate and sprout an acorn on your windowsill and eventually watch it grow into a mighty oak tree.
It’s something we’ve been doing each Autumn for the past few years. It is such a simple, satisfying thing to do — and now we have our own little forest of oak saplings ready to transplant and gift to friends.
Link to our journal post in our profile …
It’s acorn season, and we’ve been out in the forest collecting some acorns to sprout at home.
So this week over on our Journal we are sharing how to select, store, germinate and sprout an acorn on your windowsill and eventually watch it grow into a mighty oak tree.
It’s something we’ve been doing each Autumn for the past few years. It is such a simple, satisfying thing to do — and now we have our own little forest of oak saplings ready to transplant and gift to friends.
Link to our journal post in our profile …

It’s acorn season, and we’ve been out in the forest collecting some acorns to sprout at home.
So this week over on our Journal we are sharing how to select, store, germinate and sprout an acorn on your windowsill and eventually watch it grow into a mighty oak tree.
It’s something we’ve been doing each Autumn for the past few years. It is such a simple, satisfying thing to do — and now we have our own little forest of oak saplings ready to transplant and gift to friends.
Link to our journal post in our profile …

It’s acorn season, and we’ve been out in the forest collecting some acorns to sprout at home.
So this week over on our Journal we are sharing how to select, store, germinate and sprout an acorn on your windowsill and eventually watch it grow into a mighty oak tree.
It’s something we’ve been doing each Autumn for the past few years. It is such a simple, satisfying thing to do — and now we have our own little forest of oak saplings ready to transplant and gift to friends.
Link to our journal post in our profile …
It’s acorn season, and we’ve been out in the forest collecting some acorns to sprout at home.
So this week over on our Journal we are sharing how to select, store, germinate and sprout an acorn on your windowsill and eventually watch it grow into a mighty oak tree.
It’s something we’ve been doing each Autumn for the past few years. It is such a simple, satisfying thing to do — and now we have our own little forest of oak saplings ready to transplant and gift to friends.
Link to our journal post in our profile …

It’s acorn season, and we’ve been out in the forest collecting some acorns to sprout at home.
So this week over on our Journal we are sharing how to select, store, germinate and sprout an acorn on your windowsill and eventually watch it grow into a mighty oak tree.
It’s something we’ve been doing each Autumn for the past few years. It is such a simple, satisfying thing to do — and now we have our own little forest of oak saplings ready to transplant and gift to friends.
Link to our journal post in our profile …

Very proud of this new piece. “Giant Kelp Forest” hand printed on washi. Our largest print yet.
Looking for gift ideas ? We been busy adding lots of lovely new products, books and prints … all perfect for gifting

Sycamore Keys
Today we’re adding a Sycamore Key print to our collection of Woodland Treasures.
Few things capture the simple pleasure of childhood quite like a sycamore helicopter. We still can’t resist picking them up, tossing them into the air, and watching them spiral gently back to earth.
This new block print celebrates one of the nature’s treasures.

Sycamore Keys
Today we’re adding a Sycamore Key print to our collection of Woodland Treasures.
Few things capture the simple pleasure of childhood quite like a sycamore helicopter. We still can’t resist picking them up, tossing them into the air, and watching them spiral gently back to earth.
This new block print celebrates one of the nature’s treasures.

Sycamore Keys
Today we’re adding a Sycamore Key print to our collection of Woodland Treasures.
Few things capture the simple pleasure of childhood quite like a sycamore helicopter. We still can’t resist picking them up, tossing them into the air, and watching them spiral gently back to earth.
This new block print celebrates one of the nature’s treasures.

Sycamore Keys
Today we’re adding a Sycamore Key print to our collection of Woodland Treasures.
Few things capture the simple pleasure of childhood quite like a sycamore helicopter. We still can’t resist picking them up, tossing them into the air, and watching them spiral gently back to earth.
This new block print celebrates one of the nature’s treasures.

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick

Ómos is a new Irish guesthouse and restaurant in Abbeyleix, Co Laois, which will open its doors for the first time this July. The project has been created by a very talented team, lead by chef @cuangreene .
Superfolk have supplied a range of our products to be used in the project. Can’t wait to see it open and we wish Cuán and all Ómos team the best of luck.
Go n-éiri an bóthar libh.
Images 1-4 by @shantanustarick
A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday
A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday
A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday
A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday
A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday
A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday
A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday

A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday
A field trip! Come explore the marsh with us — and see what we noticed this week in May…
Sound on to enjoy the background bird song …
All of this was spotted within just a few square metres — a reminder to slow down and notice the small details around you.
1. Bog Cotton — a little rain-soaked after the recent downpours
2. Bees on Yellow Flag Irises … which are in peak bloom right now
3. Early Marsh Orchids
4. Another orchid — we think this one is an Early Purple Orchid, always open to correction
5. Cuckooflower (also known as Lady’s Smock) — flowering just as the cuckoos arrive … which we’ve been hearing lots of in recent weeks
6. A seven-spotted ladybird
7. An abandoned goldfinch nest
8. And a strange jelly-like blob… possibly some kind of bryozoan? We’d love to know if anyone can identify it?
All this is a few square metres of ground that could so easily be overlooked. Remember to slow down, crouch down, move slowly and look closely if you’re out and about in nature over the weekend. There is so much happening all around us at this time of the year.
discover nature everyday
Every month this year we are writing a diary - a short story about something that has happened in our life and studio over the previous days and weeks.
In our May Diary, we write about our recent trip to Milan Design Week and what it was like to unexpectedly spend 5 days in the city without a mobile phone signal. Without notifications, Instagram! emails and endless “must-see” lists, visiting a city feels very different.��There was so much more space to notice things.
Then, back home in Mayo, bluebell season is here. So this week, we visited the forest with our eldest daughter and the “big camera” for a little photography lesson … looking at the light filtering through the trees and practising paying attention.
So this month’s diary entry became a reflection on attention, wonder, overload and the increasingly rare feeling of just watching what is right in front of us.
Bluebell season is fleeting … lasting only a few short weeks and then they are gone for another year.
If you know a little woods near you where bluebells bloom head there now and breathe it in. There is a special flowery scent in a bluebell woods that instagram can never convey…
For extra enjoyment - bring a notebook and some paints and sit still and draw and paint #bluebellseason #bluebellwoods #springsummer #outdoorart
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day

These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day

These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day

These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day
These are some of the beautiful and magical things you could see or do (for FREE) by the sea on a sunny April weekend in the west of Ireland…
3 - Discover starfish at low tide
4 - Collect Red Jasper
5 - Spot razor clams squirting water as the tide drops (watch closely) to see the water squirt up
6 - Find more starfish
7 - Practice patience while Salt fishing for razor clams
8 - Success! Collect razor clams using salt as the tide drops
9 - Spot Barnacle Geese - imagine these guys have travelled from Greenland to Ireland for the winter and should be heading back to Greenland soon
10 - Forage for seaweeds likeSugar Kelp
11 - Watch a lone wild hare in a field lit by the slanting sun
12 - Have a staring match with a cow at the beach
13 - Experience the aftermath of winter storms and high tides - every time we visit this section of the beach it completely has changed shape
14.Watch a west of Ireland sunset over rolling waves
15. Happen upon a parade of vintage Minis
16. Not photographed- watch seals playing in the estuary, spot your first swallows of the summer, happen a wild pheasant in a ditch, go sea trout angling, have a picnic on the beach, pick bog cotton
We don’t work for the west of Ireland tourism board but maybe we should. Send this to someone you think might enjoy a weekend in the west of Ireland some day

This week we decided to make a test batch of our woodland prints, where we have stripped back the colour and celebrate the elegance of nature’s silhouettes.
And we love the result - prints that are all the more striking for their restraint. This is just a test batch - available in limited numbers, just for now.
So what prompted this mad black and white minimalist moment?
Well here in the west of Ireland, many trees have yet to break into leaf. But it feels like this is probably our very last week of winter silhouettes … the season of black and white - watching backlit geese swim amongst the feathery reedbeds, gazing at bare branches against the cold sky and watching exposed nests silhouetted on bare tree tops.
And just as we (finally!) say goodbye to winter, I realise I will miss it. Despite myself I have grown to love winter’s bare stripped back shapes and elegant forms.
This time next week the world will be bright green again. So for this week we are lingering in the last of nature’s elegant and minimal silhouettes.
#smallbatch #testprint
This week we decided to make a test batch of our woodland prints, where we have stripped back the colour and celebrate the elegance of nature’s silhouettes.
And we love the result - prints that are all the more striking for their restraint. This is just a test batch - available in limited numbers, just for now.
So what prompted this mad black and white minimalist moment?
Well here in the west of Ireland, many trees have yet to break into leaf. But it feels like this is probably our very last week of winter silhouettes … the season of black and white - watching backlit geese swim amongst the feathery reedbeds, gazing at bare branches against the cold sky and watching exposed nests silhouetted on bare tree tops.
And just as we (finally!) say goodbye to winter, I realise I will miss it. Despite myself I have grown to love winter’s bare stripped back shapes and elegant forms.
This time next week the world will be bright green again. So for this week we are lingering in the last of nature’s elegant and minimal silhouettes.
#smallbatch #testprint

This week we decided to make a test batch of our woodland prints, where we have stripped back the colour and celebrate the elegance of nature’s silhouettes.
And we love the result - prints that are all the more striking for their restraint. This is just a test batch - available in limited numbers, just for now.
So what prompted this mad black and white minimalist moment?
Well here in the west of Ireland, many trees have yet to break into leaf. But it feels like this is probably our very last week of winter silhouettes … the season of black and white - watching backlit geese swim amongst the feathery reedbeds, gazing at bare branches against the cold sky and watching exposed nests silhouetted on bare tree tops.
And just as we (finally!) say goodbye to winter, I realise I will miss it. Despite myself I have grown to love winter’s bare stripped back shapes and elegant forms.
This time next week the world will be bright green again. So for this week we are lingering in the last of nature’s elegant and minimal silhouettes.
#smallbatch #testprint

This week we decided to make a test batch of our woodland prints, where we have stripped back the colour and celebrate the elegance of nature’s silhouettes.
And we love the result - prints that are all the more striking for their restraint. This is just a test batch - available in limited numbers, just for now.
So what prompted this mad black and white minimalist moment?
Well here in the west of Ireland, many trees have yet to break into leaf. But it feels like this is probably our very last week of winter silhouettes … the season of black and white - watching backlit geese swim amongst the feathery reedbeds, gazing at bare branches against the cold sky and watching exposed nests silhouetted on bare tree tops.
And just as we (finally!) say goodbye to winter, I realise I will miss it. Despite myself I have grown to love winter’s bare stripped back shapes and elegant forms.
This time next week the world will be bright green again. So for this week we are lingering in the last of nature’s elegant and minimal silhouettes.
#smallbatch #testprint

This week we decided to make a test batch of our woodland prints, where we have stripped back the colour and celebrate the elegance of nature’s silhouettes.
And we love the result - prints that are all the more striking for their restraint. This is just a test batch - available in limited numbers, just for now.
So what prompted this mad black and white minimalist moment?
Well here in the west of Ireland, many trees have yet to break into leaf. But it feels like this is probably our very last week of winter silhouettes … the season of black and white - watching backlit geese swim amongst the feathery reedbeds, gazing at bare branches against the cold sky and watching exposed nests silhouetted on bare tree tops.
And just as we (finally!) say goodbye to winter, I realise I will miss it. Despite myself I have grown to love winter’s bare stripped back shapes and elegant forms.
This time next week the world will be bright green again. So for this week we are lingering in the last of nature’s elegant and minimal silhouettes.
#smallbatch #testprint

This week we decided to make a test batch of our woodland prints, where we have stripped back the colour and celebrate the elegance of nature’s silhouettes.
And we love the result - prints that are all the more striking for their restraint. This is just a test batch - available in limited numbers, just for now.
So what prompted this mad black and white minimalist moment?
Well here in the west of Ireland, many trees have yet to break into leaf. But it feels like this is probably our very last week of winter silhouettes … the season of black and white - watching backlit geese swim amongst the feathery reedbeds, gazing at bare branches against the cold sky and watching exposed nests silhouetted on bare tree tops.
And just as we (finally!) say goodbye to winter, I realise I will miss it. Despite myself I have grown to love winter’s bare stripped back shapes and elegant forms.
This time next week the world will be bright green again. So for this week we are lingering in the last of nature’s elegant and minimal silhouettes.
#smallbatch #testprint

This week we decided to make a test batch of our woodland prints, where we have stripped back the colour and celebrate the elegance of nature’s silhouettes.
And we love the result - prints that are all the more striking for their restraint. This is just a test batch - available in limited numbers, just for now.
So what prompted this mad black and white minimalist moment?
Well here in the west of Ireland, many trees have yet to break into leaf. But it feels like this is probably our very last week of winter silhouettes … the season of black and white - watching backlit geese swim amongst the feathery reedbeds, gazing at bare branches against the cold sky and watching exposed nests silhouetted on bare tree tops.
And just as we (finally!) say goodbye to winter, I realise I will miss it. Despite myself I have grown to love winter’s bare stripped back shapes and elegant forms.
This time next week the world will be bright green again. So for this week we are lingering in the last of nature’s elegant and minimal silhouettes.
#smallbatch #testprint
Hope isn’t just a feeling - it’s something to practice and develop.
Hope takes many forms.

“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…
“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…
“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…

“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…

“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…

“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…

“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…

“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…
“WOODLAND ENEMIES! WOODLAND ENEMIES!”.
“Wood A-NE-MON-ES,” I correct her.
She either doesn’thear me correcting her or doesn’tcare (and knowing her, I would guess the second).
“WOODLAND ENEMIES, WOODLAND ENEMIES” she points delightedly each time we come upon a patch of anemones.
Eventually it dawns on me - woodland enemies - what a brilliant mistake for a three year old to make.
Wood anemones are a beautiful, delicate white flower. They are one of the first flowers to bloom on the woodland floor in Spring.
But I will forever imagine them now as a small army of flowers … invading the grumpy, dormant winter woodland - like something from an Elsa Beskow illustration.
The army of “woodland enemies” announce the spring, their drooping white flower heads like little helmets nodding together in agreement.
“It’s time to wake up in here. Rise and shine people!”
…
“The Keeper” is a new story - now available to read in full over on the Superfolk Journal - link in profile.
This months story is about the funny logic of children’s misremembered words and the struggling to stay open and inventive as a designer or artist when you’re no longer a beginner.
…
Trình Xem Câu Chuyện Instagram là một công cụ dễ sử dụng giúp bạn xem và lưu câu chuyện Instagram, video, ảnh hoặc IGTV một cách bí mật. Với dịch vụ này, bạn có thể tải xuống nội dung và thưởng thức ngoại tuyến bất cứ lúc nào. Nếu bạn tìm thấy điều gì đó thú vị trên Instagram mà bạn muốn xem sau này hoặc muốn xem câu chuyện mà vẫn giữ ẩn danh, Trình Xem của chúng tôi là lựa chọn hoàn hảo. Anonstories cung cấp giải pháp tuyệt vời để giữ kín danh tính của bạn. Instagram ra mắt tính năng Câu Chuyện vào tháng 8 năm 2023, và nhanh chóng được các nền tảng khác áp dụng do định dạng hấp dẫn và nhạy cảm với thời gian. Câu Chuyện cho phép người dùng chia sẻ cập nhật nhanh, bất kể là ảnh, video, hay selfie, được bổ sung với văn bản, emoji, hoặc bộ lọc, và chỉ hiển thị trong 24 giờ. Khoảng thời gian giới hạn này tạo ra mức độ tương tác cao so với các bài đăng thường xuyên. Trong thế giới ngày nay, Câu Chuyện là một trong những cách phổ biến nhất để kết nối và giao tiếp trên mạng xã hội. Tuy nhiên, khi bạn xem một Câu Chuyện, người tạo có thể thấy tên của bạn trong danh sách người xem, điều này có thể gây lo ngại về quyền riêng tư. Nếu bạn muốn duyệt Câu Chuyện mà không bị phát hiện, Anonstories sẽ hữu ích. Nó cho phép bạn xem nội dung công khai trên Instagram mà không tiết lộ danh tính của mình. Chỉ cần nhập tên người dùng của hồ sơ mà bạn tò mò và công cụ này sẽ hiển thị Câu Chuyện mới nhất của họ. Các tính năng của Trình Xem Anonstories: - Duyệt Ẩn Danh: Xem Câu Chuyện mà không xuất hiện trong danh sách người xem. - Không Cần Tài Khoản: Xem nội dung công khai mà không cần đăng ký tài khoản Instagram. - Tải Nội Dung: Lưu bất kỳ nội dung Câu Chuyện nào trực tiếp vào thiết bị của bạn để sử dụng ngoại tuyến. - Xem Highlight: Truy cập các Highlight trên Instagram, ngay cả khi đã qua 24 giờ. - Theo Dõi Đăng Lại: Theo dõi các bài đăng lại hoặc mức độ tương tác trên Câu Chuyện của hồ sơ cá nhân. Hạn chế: - Công cụ này chỉ hoạt động với các tài khoản công khai; các tài khoản riêng tư không thể truy cập. Lợi ích: - Thân thiện với quyền riêng tư: Xem bất kỳ nội dung Instagram nào mà không bị phát hiện. - Đơn giản và dễ dàng: Không cần cài đặt ứng dụng hoặc đăng ký. - Công cụ độc quyền: Tải và quản lý nội dung theo cách mà Instagram không cung cấp.
Theo dõi các cập nhật Instagram một cách kín đáo trong khi bảo vệ quyền riêng tư của bạn và vẫn giữ ẩn danh.
Xem hồ sơ và ảnh một cách ẩn danh dễ dàng với Trình Xem Hồ Sơ Riêng Tư.
Công cụ miễn phí này cho phép bạn xem Câu Chuyện Instagram ẩn danh, đảm bảo hoạt động của bạn không bị phát hiện bởi người tải lên câu chuyện.
Anonstories cho phép người dùng xem Câu Chuyện Instagram mà không cảnh báo người tạo.
Hoạt động mượt mà trên iOS, Android, Windows, macOS và các trình duyệt hiện đại như Chrome và Safari.
Ưu tiên duyệt web an toàn, ẩn danh mà không yêu cầu thông tin đăng nhập.
Người dùng có thể xem Câu Chuyện công khai chỉ bằng cách nhập tên người dùng—không cần tài khoản.
Tải ảnh (JPEG) và video (MP4) một cách dễ dàng.
Dịch vụ này miễn phí.
Nội dung từ các tài khoản riêng tư chỉ có thể truy cập bởi những người theo dõi.
Các tệp chỉ được sử dụng cho mục đích cá nhân hoặc giáo dục và phải tuân thủ quy định bản quyền.
Nhập tên người dùng công khai để xem hoặc tải xuống câu chuyện. Dịch vụ tạo liên kết trực tiếp để lưu nội dung vào thiết bị của bạn.