KHJ STUDIO Forest Breeze handheld fan - Tall
KHJ STUDIO Forest Breeze handheld fan - Tall
Close your eyes and imagine you are feeling the natural breezes on your face while you walk through a forest. Inspired by this feeling, Korean designer Hyunjoo Kim designed and handmade these modern handheld fans. The designer kept the traditional ways of making fans out of Hanji, Korean traditional handmade paper with mulberry tree. This is super sustainable as one does not cut the entire tree, but just use the branches to make Hanji paper. The hand-sanded maple wood handles are made to last and finished to perfection to feel so good in your hand.
It is a perfect gift for someone who appreciates handmade beauty and to add to your home collection of special handmade objects made out of love for nature.
4 colors represent each season: White (winter), pink (spring), green (summer), yellow (fall)
Available in 2 shapes: Tall & Wide
*Please note ONE Tall fan is $56. Not for both Tall and Wide.
Size: 7"x 14.5"
Materials
Materials
Hanji; Korean handmade paper, bamboo, maple wood
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
We will ship out within 1-3 days of receiving your order. From the day you have received the package, you have 10 days to return the items. You will have to pay for your own return shipping. We cannot refund the original shipping cost. The items must be brand new and unused with original packaging. Store credit only. We cannot accept returns after 14 days. we reserve the right to refuse any return.
Weight
Weight
0.48 lb including packaging
Care Instructions
Care Instructions
Do not get it wet.
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KHJ Studio
Hyunjoo Kim is an multidisciplinary designer/artist based in Seoul, Korea. She focuses on sculpture, installation, and craft-related lifestyle items. She is truly inspired by nature and loves to explore how natural materials can form, work together, age and biodegrade. She uses a whole range of natural materials such as stone, clay, Hanji; Korean handmade paper, and wood. Her work explores the contrasts and the balances between Korean traditions and modernism, past, present and future, opposites of nature, and all the spaces inbetween. She thinks and sketches with her hands and everything she produces are made with her own hands.