Loqi Re-Usable Bags - Various

$22.00

Foldable shopper bag with zip pocket. Made of 100% recycled taffeta. Water resistant. Made using waterless printing.

Bag size: 50x42cm

Cats: A siren Siamese. A sneaky Sphynx. A purring Persian. Take your daily dose of cute kittens to go with you Stephen Cheetham’s Cats collection. Stephen Cheetham combines bright, vibrant colours, clean lines and a bit of humour here and there, evoking thoughts and feelings of small and big subjects of life.

Dogs: Stephen Cheetham is an illustrator based in Bologna, Italy.
His style combines bright, vibrant colours, clean lines, bold shapes, and often good dose of humour.

Irises: Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh is one of the world’s most well-known artists. He only painted for about 10 years, yet he produced more than 2000 works—all in his unmistakable, signature style. His artwork continues to capture hearts and imaginations around the world.

Nangala Water Dreaming Blue: Kirsten Nangala Egan was born in 1989 in Yuendumu, a remote aboriginal community 290 kms north west of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory of Australia and grew up in the bush in Wayililinypa. Kirsten paints her Father’s dreaming, Yankirri Jukurrpa (Emu Dreaming) and Warlukurlangu Jukurrpa (Fire Country Dreaming), her Mother’s Mina Mina Jukurrpa and Pampardu Jukurrpa (Flying Ant Dreaming) and her grandfather’s Ngapa Jukurrpa (Water Dreaming). The tradition of painting is passed down by her mother Madeleine Napangardi Dixon and her grandmother Jeannie Nungarrayi Egan. The Dreamings relate to her land, its features and the plants and animals that inhabit it on the recycled tote bag.

Napaljarri Water Dreaming Pink: Jennifer Napaljarri Lewis was born in 1962 in Areyonga, an Aboriginal community in a valley of the Macdonnell Ranges 220 km south west of Alice Springs in the Northern Territory of Australia. Jennifer belongs to the Pitjantjatjara people and her traditional land is Mutitjula at the eastern end of Uluru. Her unrestricted palette with traditional patterns, depicts her traditional Jukurrpa stories, in particular Lukarrara Jukurrpa (Desert Fringe Dreaming) on the recycled tote bag.

Saguaro Forms: Geometric genius. T-square, triangle and compass designs. The Liberty collection on this bag is an example of Wright using the tools of his trade.
Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) is represented on the UNESCO World Heritage List, his architecture pivotal to the development of modern architecture.
Inspired by organic forms, his vision was “to make life more beautiful, the world a better one for living in, and to give rhyme, reason, and meaning to life”.

Sisters: We want sorority. Allies, not rivals.⁠ The racialized, the blondes, the redheads, the fat, the thin, the disabled, the hyperactive, the messy, the young, the old, the trans, the invisible. A tribute to all women, lovers, creatives, dreamers, best friends, all those who make the world more beautiful. Girls from all over the world, let's get together and share our Sisters recycled tote bag!⁠
Glitter Power is a creative agency from France specializing in pattern, surface design and illustration. Led by its main designer Naïma, Glitter Power offers modern and colourful patterns with themes around women and diversity, nature and animals.

Thai Floral: A vibrant floral pattern illustration arranged with typical Thai flowers make this recycled tote bag fresh and colourful.
Pomme Chan is an illustrator whose eclectic style gets its inspiration from every day life.
Florals, fauna, fashion, and the female form play a big part in her works which span worldwide advertising campaigns, package design, textile patterns, and home decor.

The Frame: The Frame (El marco in Spanish) is a 1938 self portrait by Frida Kahlo.
The painting is notable as the first work by a 20th-century Mexican artist to be purchased by a major international museum, when it was acquired by The Louvre in 1939. The painting is now shown at the Musée National d'Art Moderne in the Centre Pompidou in Paris. Frida Kahlo bought this reverse glass painting from a market in Oaxaca, Mexico. She then placed a self-portrait, painted on a sheet of aluminium, into the glass frame and reverse-painted the glass.

Self Portrait Hummingbird: Frida Kahlo is a pillar of strength, perseverance and creativity. In "The Self-Portrait with Thorn Necklace and Hummingbird", Frida uses symbolic elements to express her feelings. A purple scarf, adorned with two silver butter­flies, resem­bles a crown with the butterfly as a symbol of rebirth. Frida's optimism shines alongside her suffering: "Feet, what do I need you for when I have wings to fly?“.

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