This blog is dedicated to my grandmother, and to all those who have been touched in some way by the art of my origami cranes. I am paying it forward, one small piece of paper at a time.



Senbazuru is the Japanese art of folding one thousand origami cranes. There is a legend stating that whoever folds 1,000 paper cranes will be granted a wish by the ancient bird spirit, but traditionally the feat is performed to wish eternal good luck, benevolence, and one thousand years of prosperity. For these reasons, I felt in my heart that it would be the perfect expression of appreciation, gratitude and ultimately, respectful farewell.


From the moment the idea came to me, I knew I could mould and shape this project into my own expression of something we could share together - a labor of love that she would appreciate, even if no one else in my family could fully understand what it all meant.


Each set of one hundred cranes featured here represents a moment, a memory, a spark in my life that we shared together that helped influence the person who I have become today. I hope you enjoy reading my personal reflections, so that you may fully understand the empowerment this project has had on me, and the inspiring statement of sharing beauty and joy that I learned as a result of folding my 1,000th crane.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

400/1000

I know this is one of your favorite memories we share. That hot, summer day we spent in Boston, and the "frog pond" on the Common. You tell the story so amusingly, describing me not caring a bit that the other kids were in their bathing suits. I just ran right into that water and splashed around with the others, fully clothed and everything. There's a time and place for responsible adults to have their limits, and you let me run free and have fun - just be a kid. I had a really great time that day, even if I was perhaps too young to remember it all.

I made this set of cranes to reflect, like water, the summer sun at the Boston Commons pool that day.




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