CRAFTS Index
Baskets
Beading
Boxes
Candles
Children's Room Decor
Clay
Clothing
Dolls
Faux & Other Finishes
Flowers & Foliage
Furniture
Garden & Patio
Glass
History
Holidays
Jewelry & Accessories
Kids Crafts
Lamps & Shades
Linens & Fabrics
Memory Crafts
Metal
Natural & Homemade
Needle Arts
Organizing & Storage
Painting & Staining
Paper
Photo Projects
Quilting Techniques
Recycled Objects
Ribbons & Bows
Rubber Stamping
Scrapbooking
Special Days & Gifts
Stenciling
Storage
Tabletop Decor
Toys & Games
Walls & Floors
Wedding
Wirework
Wood & Leather

BEST OF CRAFTS
Puttin' On the Knits
Knitty Gritty
Creative Juice
Sewing for the Home
Scrapbooking: Flowers
Scrapbooking Basics
Scrapbooking: Holidays
Scrapbooking: Vacations

SPONSOR LINKS

  • Lei-Making
  • From "DIY Crafts"
    episode DIC-122
    advertisement

    Click here to view a larger image.

    The yellow dots of the moa, a Hawaiian plant, were used for medicinal purposes.

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Figure A

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Since the days of the monarchy, Ni'ihau, or shell leis, have been the symbol of their namesake island, where Hawaiians still live according to the old traditions.

    James Lum, an expert in lei-making, describes five types of leis:

    The first type, called kui lau, is made by sewing through the flower. The second type, the wili lei, is held together with raffialike material (the word wili means "to wrap"). A haku lei is made by braiding a single kind of item, such as fern. The fourth type, a hili lei, is formed by braiding more than one kind of material. The fifth type is the humu papa, made by sewing the flowers onto a backing to create a flat lei.

    Lena Mendonca, or Auntie Lena, as she's called in the islands, makes beautiful shell leis called Ni'ihau leis. They're considered fine art and are often called "the diamonds of Hawaii." Auntie Lena buys the shells already drilled, and uses an awl to remove any excess sand and reopen the holes. Then she strings the shells on cord (figure A).



    RESOURCES :
    James Lum

    Lena Mendonca

  • ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: