MANAOLA Lei Puakenikeni Set: Candle, Bar Soap, Shampoo bar, Conditioner Bar, Body Lotion

Bidding Supports: Lawai International Center (KAPAA, HI)

Item Number
999-197
Value:
80 USD
Online Close:
2024-11-10 21:00:00.0  –  Bid Extension
Bid History:
8 Bids

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Description

https://www.manaolahawaii.com/

This item is a collection of body and bath items from the MANAOLA Lei Puakenikeni Set and includes: a scented candle, bar soap, a shampoo bar, a conditioner bar and body lotion. This set makes its debut as Manaola Yap's first designer scent collection. His newest life style product offering blends his passion for story telling and aromatherapy into scent stories that capture the essence of life in the islands. The new line also elevates the exotic, sweet-scented puakenikeni (10-cent flower) flower which holds deep significance for the brand?s founder Manaola Yap. ?The collection was inspired by beautiful memories of my tutus and the acts of kindness, generosity, love and aloha.?
 
MANAOLA is the Hawaiian lifestyle brand that creates indigenous artistry empowered by cultural values and ancestral knowledge. Inspired by his cultural upbringing as a native Hawaiian hula practitioner, self-taught fashion designer Manaola Yap translates Hawaiian spirituality and Hawai?i?s natural beauty into prints and products that embody repetitious patterns found in nature.

About the wonderful Puakenikeni: Puakenikeni can be a shrub or a large, flowering tree with robust limbs and fragrant blossoms. It is indigenous from New Guinea and northern Australia, but widely distributed throughout the South Pacific. Puakenikeni got its name from its use in lei making. The fragrant flowers hold up well over time and continue to imbue the wearer with its divine aroma. Valued for its ideal composition, it became known as the ten-cent flower (pua means flower and kenikeni means dime, ten cents). Puakenikeni is a sacred tree in many cultures. In Tahitian legend, the first pua tree was brought from the tenth heaven by Tane, god of the forests. In Mangaian, the pua tree was the tree that guarded the entrance to the land of the spirits in the underworld. We revere our Puakenikeni tree with gratitude and awe, for she bestows us with a carpet of fragrant flowers each day, dropping her blessings for us to wear and share.


About the Designer: Manaola Yap was born into a family whose cultural and artistic roots run deep into the volcanic soil of Hawai?i Island. For generations before contact with the West, his ancestors were hula practitioners and artisans of traditional Hawaiian textiles and dyes; more recently, his family has become known for its award-winning musical talent. Raised amid this tradition of creativity, Manaola stands upon the strong foundation laid out by his kupuna (ancestors).

Manaola learned the art and technique of costume creation and styling from his mother, Kumu Hula (hula teacher) Nani Lim Yap, and it was through this transfer of knowledge that his interest in fashion was first sparked. As his interest in fashion grew, he began to research the history of pre- and post-contact fashion in Hawai?i. At the same time, he continued to develop as a skilled hula practitioner and his connection with his ancestral roots?and with Hawai?i?deepened. Out of this synergy of interests, Manaola began to conceive of an idea: could he translate the spirituality of Hawaiian culture, and the beauty and wonder of Hawai?i, into an artistic language that could be shared with the entire world, and understood by all?


This fashion brand is Manaola?s answer to that question. Featuring bold, printed patterns that embody the Hawaiian spirit and evoke the beauty and geometry of nature, this brand introduces to the world Manaola?s vision for Hawaiian fashion in the 21st century.

After creating a concept for a pattern, Manaola hand-carves his designs into bamboo laths. These thin pieces of wood are then used in a traditional Hawaiian stamping technique called ?ohe kapala. In traditional Hawaiian artistic thought, these repetitious patterns emulate nature and create a powerful symmetry, which Manaola refers to as ?sacred geometry.?


The art and practice of ?ohe kapala dates back more than a thousand years to the early migration of Polynesian settlers in Hawai?i. Kapa, a traditional Hawaiian cloth made from wauke or mamaki bark used for clothing and bedding, was often adorned with patterns created with these bamboo tools. Just as it was done then, Manaola gathers the native variety of ?ohe (bamboo) exclusively by hand, without the aid of machine tools. In this way, he honors the traditional art of ?ohe kapala. After each stamp is hewn from the wood, it is then digitized and transferred onto high quality fabrics that Manaola uses to create his fashion-forward clothing. Each MANAOLA design is original and a unique reflection of the artist?s creativity.

 

Donor: Nathan Bunnell

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Item Special Note

Pick Up and Shipping Information

Local pick-up is available at our Lihue office at 3343 Kanakolu St, Lihue HI
Dates and times:

Wednesday, November 13, 10:00 am to 2:00 pm

Friday, November 15, 10:00 am to 2:00 pm

Saturday, November 16, 10:00 am to 2:00 pm

Shipping is available anywhere in the world.


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For more information email info@lawaicenter.org or text (808) 639-5952.