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  • Muriel Balensi is a glass designer working in Murano island. She is specialised on craftmanship of the traditional glass pearls but in a contemporary mood.
    em7150332.jpg
  • Muriel Balensi is a glass designer working in Murano island. She is specialised on craftmanship of the traditional glass pearls but in a contemporary mood.
    em7150365.jpg
  • Muriel Balensi is a glass designer working in Murano island. She is specialised on craftmanship of the traditional glass pearls but in a contemporary mood.
    em7150328.jpg
  • Muriel Balensi is a glass designer working in Murano island. She is specialised on craftmanship of the traditional glass pearls but in a contemporary mood, often representing "the world inside a glass pearl". This "La Fenice" work is inspired by the historical teatre atmosphere.
    em7150351.jpg
  • Muriel Balensi is a glass designer working in Murano island. She is specialised on craftmanship of the traditional glass pearls but in a contemporary mood.
    em7150339.jpg
  • Muriel Balensi is a glass designer working in Murano island. She is specialised on craftmanship of the traditional glass pearls but in a contemporary mood.
    em7150338.jpg
  • Muriel Balensi is a glass designer working in Murano island. She is specialised on craftmanship of the traditional glass pearls but in a contemporary mood.
    em7150362.jpg
  • Matteo Tamassia working in Tramontin "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150139.jpg
  • St. John's point. The weaver Cyndi Graham and her Handweaving Studio.
    em7231015.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop, Gualtiero Dall’Osto is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150196.jpg
  • Valese Foundry, the last historic foundry surviving in Venice. The owner Carlo Semenzato.
    em7150445.jpg
  • Sogno Veneziano Atelier, specialised in handmade Venice's traditional dresses for Carnival.
    em7150322.jpg
  • Sogno Veneziano Atelier, Giulia Russolo is specialised in handmade Venice's traditional dresses for Carnival.
    em7150290.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop of Gualtiero Dall’Osto. Gualtiero is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150225.jpg
  • San Trovaso "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150178.jpg
  • Matteo Tamassia working in Tramontin "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150124.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor on his workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150048.jpg
  • Felline. Antonio Cossa is one of the most  famous craftsmen and ceramic makers of this small town and of Salento.
    em7125787.jpg
  • Felline. Antonio Cossa is one of the most  famous craftsmen and ceramic makers of this small town and of Salento.
    em7125786.jpg
  • Jane Attard, a historical Mdina's weawer. His atelier has been visite by many Vips like a young Elisabeth before she was queen.
    em8402169.jpg
  • Ferlach, Jagd und Büchsenmachermuseum. Traditional rifles engraved with gold decorations.
    em8003174.jpg
  • Ferlach, Jagd und Büchsenmachermuseum. traditional shotguns.
    em8003156.jpg
  • Fanzoj gunsmiths, a famiily business from 1790.
    em8003141.jpg
  • Fanzoj gunsmiths, a famiily business from 1790.
    em8003140.jpg
  • Daniela Fanzoy, vice president and creative manager of Fanzoj gunsmiths, a famiily business from 1790.
    em8003081.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed of  Eddie Doherty is one of the most traditional Irish tweed workshop.
    em7231125.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed loom and the traditional weaver  Eddie Doherty.
    em7231089.jpg
  • St. John's point. The weaver Cyndi Graham and her Handweaving Studio.
    em7231086.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop, Gualtiero Dall’Osto is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150193.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop of Gualtiero Dall’Osto. Gualtiero is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150284.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop, Gualtiero Dall’Osto is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150254.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor's workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150065.jpg
  • Ferlach, Jagd und Büchsenmachermuseum. Traditional handmade decorated rifles.
    em8003165.jpg
  • Valese Foundry, the last historic foundry surviving in Venice.
    em7150463.jpg
  • Valese Foundry, the last historic foundry surviving in Venice. The owner Carlo Semenzato.
    em7150437.jpg
  • Francesco di Pumpo, one of the last traditional Venice's framework craftmen.
    em7150426.jpg
  • Sogno Veneziano Atelier, Giulia Russolo is specialised in handmade Venice's traditional dresses for Carnival.
    em7150286.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop of Gualtiero Dall’Osto. Gualtiero is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150280.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop of Gualtiero Dall’Osto. Gualtiero is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150275.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop of Gualtiero Dall’Osto. Gualtiero is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150270.jpg
  • Matteo Tamassia working in Tramontin "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150123.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor on his workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150016.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor on his workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150013.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte. Tonino Sanna, one of the last two shipwright of the island. Carloforte boasts a long-standing tradition of wooden boatbuilding. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162183.jpg
  • Ferlach, Jagd und Büchsenmachermuseum.
    em8003190.jpg
  • Fanzoj gunsmiths, a famiily business from 1790.
    em8003098.jpg
  • Gerhard Orou one of the best engravers of Ferlach gunsmiths. The rifles made in the small village of Ferlach are renowned for their precision, as beautiful as museum pieces when they leave the workshop, yet destined for practical use.
    em8003048.jpg
  • Gerhard Orou one of the best engravers of Ferlach gunsmiths. The rifles made in the small village of Ferlach are renowned for their precision, as beautiful as museum pieces when they leave the workshop, yet destined for practical use.
    em8003028.jpg
  • Ardara. Irish tweed traditional workshop at Triona Design.
    em7231178.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed of  Eddie Doherty is one of the most traditional Irish tweed workshop.
    em7231163.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed of  Eddie Doherty is one of the most traditional Irish tweed workshop.
    em7231145.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed of  Eddie Doherty is one of the most traditional Irish tweed workshop.
    em7231105.jpg
  • St. John's point. The weaver Cyndi Graham and her Handweaving Studio.
    em7231080.jpg
  • Sogno Veneziano Atelier, specialised in handmade Venice's traditional dresses for Carnival.
    em7150326.jpg
  • Sogno Veneziano Atelier, Giulia Russolo is specialised in handmade Venice's traditional dresses for Carnival.
    em7150318.jpg
  • Sogno Veneziano Atelier, Giulia Russolo is specialised in handmade Venice's traditional dresses for Carnival.
    em7150297.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop of Gualtiero Dall’Osto. Gualtiero is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150272.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop of Gualtiero Dall’Osto. Gualtiero is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150268.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop, Gualtiero Dall’Osto is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150260.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop, Gualtiero Dall’Osto is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150183.jpg
  • Tramontin "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150165.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor's workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150096.jpg
  • Felline. Antonio Cossa is one of the most  famous craftsmen and ceramic makers of this small town and of Salento.
    em7125778.jpg
  • Ferlach, Jagd und Büchsenmachermuseum. traditonal hunt target
    em8003155.jpg
  • Fanzoj gunsmiths, a famiily business from 1790.
    em8003143.jpg
  • Ferlach, a rare four barrels rifle at Johann Fanzoy, a family business from 1790, an unusual four-barrel combination guns (vierlings)
    em8003119.jpg
  • Fanzoj gunsmiths, a famiily business from 1790.
    em8003105.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed of  Eddie Doherty is one of the most traditional Irish tweed workshop.
    em7231161.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed loom and the traditional weaver  Eddie Doherty.
    em7231090.jpg
  • Francesco di Pumpo, one of the last traditional Venice's framework craftmen.
    em7150431.jpg
  • Francesco di Pumpo, one of the last traditional Venice's framework craftmen.
    em7150430.jpg
  • Tragicomica workshop, Gualtiero Dall’Osto is one of the most celebrated Venice's  "mascherer", the craftmen specialised in traditional mask for Venice's carnival.
    em7150244.jpg
  • San Trovaso "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150175.jpg
  • Matteo Tamassia working in Tramontin "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150142.jpg
  • Matteo Tamassia working in Tramontin "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150133.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor's workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150084.jpg
  • Ferlach, Jagd und Büchsenmachermuseum.
    em8003187.jpg
  • Ferlach, a rare four barrels rifle at Johann Fanzoy, a family business from 1790, an unusual four-barrel combination guns (vierlings)
    em8003114.jpg
  • Gerhard Orou one of the best engravers of Ferlach gunsmiths. The rifles made in the small village of Ferlach are renowned for their precision, as beautiful as museum pieces when they leave the workshop, yet destined for practical use.
    em8003070.jpg
  • Gerhard Orou one of the best engravers of Ferlach gunsmiths. The rifles made in the small village of Ferlach are renowned for their precision, as beautiful as museum pieces when they leave the workshop, yet destined for practical use.
    em8003066.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed of  Eddie Doherty is one of the most traditional Irish tweed workshop.
    em7231152.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed of  Eddie Doherty is one of the most traditional Irish tweed workshop.
    em7231147.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed of  Eddie Doherty is one of the most traditional Irish tweed workshop.
    em7231117.jpg
  • Valese Foundry, the last historic foundry surviving in Venice. The owner Carlo Semenzato.
    em7150436.jpg
  • Matteo Tamassia working in Tramontin "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150121.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor's workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150067.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor's workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150061.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor (right) on his workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150010.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor on his workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150008.jpg
  • Fanzoj gunsmiths, a famiily business from 1790.
    em8003090.jpg
  • Ardara. Irish tweed traditional workshop at Triona Design.
    em7231187.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed loom and the traditional weaver  Eddie Doherty.
    em7231088.jpg
  • Ardara, Handwoven Tweed loom and the traditional weaver  Eddie Doherty.
    em7231087.jpg
  • St. John's point. The weaver Cyndi Graham and her Handweaving Studio.
    em7231070.jpg
  • Valese Foundry, the last historic foundry surviving in Venice.
    em7150462.jpg
  • Valese Foundry, the last historic foundry surviving in Venice.
    em7150458.jpg
  • Matteo Tamassia working in Tramontin "squero", one of the last two historic boatyards still building gondolas surviving in Venice.
    em7150135.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor's workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150054.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor on his workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150050.jpg
  • Saverio Pastor on his workshop on a quiet canalside. The fórcola is the rowlock or oarpost used in traditional Venetian boats, the most well-known type of boat being the gondola. Fórcole are unlike any other type of rowlock because of the unique rowing position of the oarsman: he stands facing forward and, in craft like the gondola, propels and manouevres the boat with a single oar.
    em7150038.jpg
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