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Making

For anthropologist Tim Ingold, making is not just about creating objects — it’s about entering into a relationship with the world through the act of doing.

Every craft gesture is a dialogue between body, materials, and environment, where thought takes shape in the very process of action.It’s not about imposing a form, but about being guided by the flows of matter, following them with care and sensitivity.

 

Making is embodied knowledge — a way of inhabiting time and space with hands and mind working together. In this sense, to make is also to become: the world transforms as we transform with it.

The shepards' bread

Shepherds’ bread is more than food: it is a communal act where hands, memory, and resilience come together. In its making, Sardinians weave nourishment, culture, and longevity into a single gesture.

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