dried fruit

From virtual reality to ink and nib: the husk is back in vogue!

A touch screen, ergonomic keyboards, joysticks, mice and other contemporary devilries. Do the kids not get involved? Are they distracted and unmotivated? A matter of stimuli! It has increasingly been shown that interactivity makes the mind lazy, hyper stimulation puts our brains on the defensive, which, for its part, "no longer knows where to slam its head!"

Here, from the 1900s with resounding fury: mallo ink with mordant and the quill pen!

The husk, a real natural pigment, as well as being edible (it is used for the nocino) and used in a thousand types of color (from hair to furniture) has recently been re-adopted in "creative laboratories for children" to improve solicitation nervous and mind-hand exercise. In this way, the new generations learn to refine the now lost manual skills needed to write quickly in italics. A blow to life for self-esteem and to recover the elasticity of the younger minds, which are becoming increasingly rigid with computers.