€23.00
BLOOD CONNECTING PEOPLE.
WOVEN TOTE BAG. 38 x 38 cm.
Created and produced by TYPOART. © 2022 TYPOART. © Illustration: Gediminas Leonavičius / concept & design: Jūratė Rutkauskaitė. All rights reserved. www.typoart.world
Shipping worldwide.
Orders are expected to arrive within 7-15-30 business days, depending on delivery point and COVID-19 restrictions, which affect delivery time.
Canvas. 80% recycled cotton, 20% recycled polyester. Weight: 300 g/m².
Wash and iron inside out. Wash similar colours together at 30°C gentle.
Ironing 110°. Do not iron on print.
The colours displayed on your screen are the guide only and may not perfectly reflect the true colours on the product. Buying items on TYPOART store you can be sure that you will receive a limited edition piece crafted with a passion and touched by the artists' own hands. TYPOART's production comes with high quality and perfection. Thank you very much for understanding and respecting the copyright of TYPOART. Thank you for being with us.
€23.00
SOMBRERO SUGAR SKULL.
WOVEN GYM BAG 37 x 43 cm.
Created and produced by TYPOART. © 2022 TYPOART. © Illustration: Gediminas Leonavičius / concept & design: Jūratė Rutkauskaitė. All rights reserved. www.typoart.world
Shipping worldwide.
Orders are expected to arrive within 7-15-30 business days, depending on delivery point and COVID-19 restrictions, which affect delivery time.
Canvas. 80% recycled cotton, 20% recycled polyester. Weight: 300 g/m².
Wash and iron inside out. Wash similar colours together at 30°C gentle.
Ironing 110°. Do not iron on print.
Sugar art was brought to the New World by Italian missionaries in the 17th century. The first Church mention of sugar art was from Palermo at Easter time when little sugar lambs and angels were made to adorn the side altars in the Catholic Church.
Mexico, abundant in sugar production and too poor to buy fancy imported European church decorations, learned quickly from the friars how to make sugar art for their religious festivals. Clay molded sugar figures of angels, sheep and sugar skulls go back to the Colonial Period 18th century. Sugar skulls represented a departed soul, had the name written on the forehead and was placed on the home ofrenda or gravestone to honor the return of a particular spirit.
There is nothing as beautiful as a big, fancy, unusual sugar skull! It is a wonderful way to celebrate the memories of our loved ones who are now gone… through art, cooking, music, doing activities with our children, we can recount family stories, fun times and lessons learned… not how the person died, but how they lived.
We hope you come to enjoy Day of the Dead as much as TYPOART do!
The colours displayed on your screen are the guide only and may not perfectly reflect the true colours on the product. Buying items on TYPOART store you can be sure that you will receive a limited edition piece crafted with a passion and touched by the artists' own hands. And let others know that TYPOART honourably takes part promoting the interest of people in the world's history. TYPOART's production comes with high quality and perfection. Thank you very much for understanding and respecting the copyright of TYPOART. Thank you for being with us.
View full product details€23.00
BRIDE SUGAR SKULL.
WOVEN GYM BAG 37 x 43 cm.
Created and produced by TYPOART. © 2022 TYPOART. © Illustration: Gediminas Leonavičius / concept & design: Jūratė Rutkauskaitė. All rights reserved. www.typoart.world
Shipping worldwide.
Orders are expected to arrive within 7-15-30 business days, depending on delivery point and COVID-19 restrictions, which affect delivery time.
Canvas. 80% recycled cotton, 20% recycled polyester. Weight: 300 g/m².
Wash and iron inside out. Wash similar colours together at 30°C gentle.
Ironing 110°. Do not iron on print.
Sugar art was brought to the New World by Italian missionaries in the 17th century. The first Church mention of sugar art was from Palermo at Easter time when little sugar lambs and angels were made to adorn the side altars in the Catholic Church.
Mexico, abundant in sugar production and too poor to buy fancy imported European church decorations, learned quickly from the friars how to make sugar art for their religious festivals. Clay molded sugar figures of angels, sheep and sugar skulls go back to the Colonial Period 18th century. Sugar skulls represented a departed soul, had the name written on the forehead and was placed on the home ofrenda or gravestone to honor the return of a particular spirit. At midnight on October 31, and the spirits of all deceased children, known as angelitos, are allowed to reunite with their families for 24 hours. On this same day, small skulls are often placed on the offrenda (altar), representing the children who have passed. The following day, November 2, larger and more detailed skulls replace the smaller ones, representing the deceased adults who now come down to enjoy the festivities that are prepared for them.
There is nothing as beautiful as a big, fancy, unusual sugar skull! It is a wonderful way to celebrate the memories of our loved ones who are now gone… through art, cooking, music, doing activities with our children, we can recount family stories, fun times and lessons learned… not how the person died, but how they lived.
We hope you come to enjoy Day of the Dead as much as TYPOART do!
The colours displayed on your screen are the guide only and may not perfectly reflect the true colours on the product. Buying items on TYPOART store you can be sure that you will receive a limited edition piece crafted with a passion and touched by the artists' own hands. And let others know that TYPOART honourably takes part promoting the interest of people in the world's history. TYPOART's production comes with high quality and perfection. Thank you very much for understanding and respecting the copyright of TYPOART. Thank you for being with us.
View full product details€23.00
SMILING SUGAR SKULL.
WOVEN GYM BAG 37 x 43 cm.
Created and produced by TYPOART. © 2022 TYPOART. © Illustration: Gediminas Leonavičius / concept & design: Jūratė Rutkauskaitė. All rights reserved. www.typoart.world
Shipping worldwide.
Orders are expected to arrive within 7-15-30 business days, depending on delivery point and COVID-19 restrictions, which affect delivery time.
Canvas. 80% recycled cotton, 20% recycled polyester. Weight: 300 g/m².
Wash and iron inside out. Wash similar colours together at 30°C gentle.
Ironing 110°. Do not iron on print.
Sugar art was brought to the New World by Italian missionaries in the 17th century. The first Church mention of sugar art was from Palermo at Easter time when little sugar lambs and angels were made to adorn the side altars in the Catholic Church.
Mexico, abundant in sugar production and too poor to buy fancy imported European church decorations, learned quickly from the friars how to make sugar art for their religious festivals. Clay molded sugar figures of angels, sheep and sugar skulls go back to the Colonial Period 18th century. Sugar skulls represented a departed soul, had the name written on the forehead and was placed on the home ofrenda or gravestone to honor the return of a particular spirit. At midnight on October 31, and the spirits of all deceased children, known as angelitos, are allowed to reunite with their families for 24 hours. On this same day, small skulls are often placed on the offrenda (altar), representing the children who have passed. The following day, November 2, larger and more detailed skulls replace the smaller ones, representing the deceased adults who now come down to enjoy the festivities that are prepared for them.
There is nothing as beautiful as a big, fancy, unusual sugar skull! It is a wonderful way to celebrate the memories of our loved ones who are now gone… through art, cooking, music, doing activities with our children, we can recount family stories, fun times and lessons learned… not how the person died, but how they lived.
We hope you come to enjoy Day of the Dead as much as TYPOART do!
The colours displayed on your screen are the guide only and may not perfectly reflect the true colours on the product. Buying items on TYPOART store you can be sure that you will receive a limited edition piece crafted with a passion and touched by the artists' own hands. And let others know that TYPOART honourably takes part promoting the interest of people in the world's history. TYPOART's production comes with high quality and perfection. Thank you very much for understanding and respecting the copyright of TYPOART. Thank you for being with us.
View full product details€23.00
SUGAR SKULL.
WOVEN GYM BAG 37 x 43 cm.
Created and produced by TYPOART. © 2022 TYPOART. © Illustration: Gediminas Leonavičius / concept & design: Jūratė Rutkauskaitė. All rights reserved. www.typoart.world
Shipping worldwide.
Orders are expected to arrive within 7-15-30 business days, depending on delivery point and COVID-19 restrictions, which affect delivery time.
Canvas. 80% recycled cotton, 20% recycled polyester. Weight: 300 g/m².
Wash and iron inside out. Wash similar colours together at 30°C gentle.
Ironing 110°. Do not iron on print.
Sugar art was brought to the New World by Italian missionaries in the 17th century. The first Church mention of sugar art was from Palermo at Easter time when little sugar lambs and angels were made to adorn the side altars in the Catholic Church.
Mexico, abundant in sugar production and too poor to buy fancy imported European church decorations, learned quickly from the friars how to make sugar art for their religious festivals. Clay molded sugar figures of angels, sheep and sugar skulls go back to the Colonial Period 18th century. Sugar skulls represented a departed soul, had the name written on the forehead and was placed on the home ofrenda or gravestone to honor the return of a particular spirit. At midnight on October 31, and the spirits of all deceased children, known as angelitos, are allowed to reunite with their families for 24 hours. On this same day, small skulls are often placed on the offrenda (altar), representing the children who have passed. The following day, November 2, larger and more detailed skulls replace the smaller ones, representing the deceased adults who now come down to enjoy the festivities that are prepared for them.
There is nothing as beautiful as a big, fancy, unusual sugar skull! It is a wonderful way to celebrate the memories of our loved ones who are now gone… through art, cooking, music, doing activities with our children, we can recount family stories, fun times and lessons learned… not how the person died, but how they lived.
We hope you come to enjoy Day of the Dead as much as TYPOART do!
The colours displayed on your screen are the guide only and may not perfectly reflect the true colours on the product. Buying items on TYPOART store you can be sure that you will receive a limited edition piece crafted with a passion and touched by the artists' own hands. And let others know that TYPOART honourably takes part promoting the interest of people in the world's history. TYPOART's production comes with high quality and perfection. Thank you very much for understanding and respecting the copyright of TYPOART. Thank you for being with us.
View full product details