Kenidjack Scarf
At this time of the year, the colours in the natural world just seem to pop
You notice this especially when watching a squall rolling in off the Atlantic in the low sun
Offset with the swathes of rusty winter bracken that you peer over the tops of when out walking
Bracken is a fern, feather-like in structure, it sends up fresh sprigs in the warmer months but then during winter what is left behind are these jagged rusty burnt fronds, weathered and vibrant
The deep royal indigo blue of the ocean sitting against this rich charred orange makes for an electric warming combination
As above, so below - as these colours also present beneath the surface of this very earth - raw copper and iron ore in this mineral rich land.
The Kenidjack scarf is named after our home valley that harbours these seasonal feasts for the eyes.
This particular scarf is one of a unique pair out in the world today, not so far from the valley