View allAll Photos Tagged MENTALHEALTHAWARENESS

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

Double Elephant Print Workshop set up a print workshop in Rougemont Place outside Exeter Library to raise mental health awareness.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

This sling was inspired by the Semicolon project. If you look closely, you'll see that the paisley in the sling are snuggly semicolons -- maybe mama and baby, maybe daddy and baby, maybe an aunt or uncle or grandparent. For a family who has been touched by suicide or a parent who has wrestled with suicidal ideation and/or attempts, this sling serves as a reminder of strength -- the semicolon to pause where a period could have ended the sentence.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

30k for £30k, She Runs Cardiff Big Summer Relay for Bigmoose

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

Over a 4 month period in 2014, SAA-uk partnered with the Echo Centre (part of the Hamara group) to deliver the Khushi Project. This project, funded by Time to Change, used art as a tool to empower people with mental health problems to share their experiences and challenge stigma.

 

These photographs document a celebration evening, where we were joined by the wonderful Shaheen Khan, the UK's leading Ghazal and Sufi singer. Shaheen was accompanied by Sunil Jadhav on Harmonium and Alok Verma on Tabla/Dholak. Some of the project participants also shared their art work and poetry.

 

Supported by Leeds Inspired.

 

You can find out more about the Khushi project on the blog: khushidil.tumblr.com

 

Photos by Maria Spadafora

 

www.saa-.uk.org

www.hamara.org.uk

Over a 4 month period in 2014, SAA-uk partnered with the Echo Centre (part of the Hamara group) to deliver the Khushi Project. This project, funded by Time to Change, used art as a tool to empower people with mental health problems to share their experiences and challenge stigma.

 

These photographs document a celebration evening, where we were joined by the wonderful Shaheen Khan, the UK's leading Ghazal and Sufi singer. Shaheen was accompanied by Sunil Jadhav on Harmonium and Alok Verma on Tabla/Dholak. Some of the project participants also shared their art work and poetry.

 

Supported by Leeds Inspired.

 

You can find out more about the Khushi project on the blog: khushidil.tumblr.com

 

Photos by Maria Spadafora

 

www.saa-.uk.org

www.hamara.org.uk

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

This sling was inspired by the Semicolon project. If you look closely, you'll see that the paisley in the sling are snuggly semicolons -- maybe mama and baby, maybe daddy and baby, maybe an aunt or uncle or grandparent. For a family who has been touched by suicide or a parent who has wrestled with suicidal ideation and/or attempts, this sling serves as a reminder of strength -- the semicolon to pause where a period could have ended the sentence.

Over a 4 month period in 2014, SAA-uk partnered with the Echo Centre (part of the Hamara group) to deliver the Khushi Project. This project, funded by Time to Change, used art as a tool to empower people with mental health problems to share their experiences and challenge stigma.

 

These photographs document a celebration evening, where we were joined by the wonderful Shaheen Khan, the UK's leading Ghazal and Sufi singer. Shaheen was accompanied by Sunil Jadhav on Harmonium and Alok Verma on Tabla/Dholak. Some of the project participants also shared their art work and poetry.

 

Supported by Leeds Inspired.

 

You can find out more about the Khushi project on the blog: khushidil.tumblr.com

 

Photos by Maria Spadafora

 

www.saa-.uk.org

www.hamara.org.uk

This is really just quite brilliant; turn your photographs into Polaroids, and no cumbersome or expensive Photoshop plug-ins or edits to mess with.

 

Shake it as it "develops" and see what happens.

 

It's here

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

Over a 4 month period in 2014, SAA-uk partnered with the Echo Centre (part of the Hamara group) to deliver the Khushi Project. This project, funded by Time to Change, used art as a tool to empower people with mental health problems to share their experiences and challenge stigma.

 

These photographs document a celebration evening, where we were joined by the wonderful Shaheen Khan, the UK's leading Ghazal and Sufi singer. Shaheen was accompanied by Sunil Jadhav on Harmonium and Alok Verma on Tabla/Dholak. Some of the project participants also shared their art work and poetry.

 

Supported by Leeds Inspired.

 

You can find out more about the Khushi project on the blog: khushidil.tumblr.com

 

Photos by Maria Spadafora

 

www.saa-.uk.org

www.hamara.org.uk

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

Over a 4 month period in 2014, SAA-uk partnered with the Echo Centre (part of the Hamara group) to deliver the Khushi Project. This project, funded by Time to Change, used art as a tool to empower people with mental health problems to share their experiences and challenge stigma.

 

These photographs document a celebration evening, where we were joined by the wonderful Shaheen Khan, the UK's leading Ghazal and Sufi singer. Shaheen was accompanied by Sunil Jadhav on Harmonium and Alok Verma on Tabla/Dholak. Some of the project participants also shared their art work and poetry.

 

Supported by Leeds Inspired.

 

You can find out more about the Khushi project on the blog: khushidil.tumblr.com

 

Photos by Maria Spadafora

 

www.saa-.uk.org

www.hamara.org.uk

This sling was inspired by the Semicolon project. If you look closely, you'll see that the paisley in the sling are snuggly semicolons -- maybe mama and baby, maybe daddy and baby, maybe an aunt or uncle or grandparent. For a family who has been touched by suicide or a parent who has wrestled with suicidal ideation and/or attempts, this sling serves as a reminder of strength -- the semicolon to pause where a period could have ended the sentence.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

Over a 4 month period in 2014, SAA-uk partnered with the Echo Centre (part of the Hamara group) to deliver the Khushi Project. This project, funded by Time to Change, used art as a tool to empower people with mental health problems to share their experiences and challenge stigma.

 

These photographs document a celebration evening, where we were joined by the wonderful Shaheen Khan, the UK's leading Ghazal and Sufi singer. Shaheen was accompanied by Sunil Jadhav on Harmonium and Alok Verma on Tabla/Dholak. Some of the project participants also shared their art work and poetry.

 

Supported by Leeds Inspired.

 

You can find out more about the Khushi project on the blog: khushidil.tumblr.com

 

Photos by Maria Spadafora

 

www.saa-.uk.org

www.hamara.org.uk

Comments most welcome

Woman of the woods popping in to ask a semi-rhetorical question: are leaves and pine needles and moss-clad tree roots as soothing to you as they all are to me? When you aren't walking around barefoot that is😉 If you asked the roots questions if they could really talk... would they leave you with more questions or answers? Thoughts to ponder

This sling was inspired by the Semicolon project. If you look closely, you'll see that the paisley in the sling are snuggly semicolons -- maybe mama and baby, maybe daddy and baby, maybe an aunt or uncle or grandparent. For a family who has been touched by suicide or a parent who has wrestled with suicidal ideation and/or attempts, this sling serves as a reminder of strength -- the semicolon to pause where a period could have ended the sentence.

This sling was inspired by the Semicolon project. If you look closely, you'll see that the paisley in the sling are snuggly semicolons -- maybe mama and baby, maybe daddy and baby, maybe an aunt or uncle or grandparent. For a family who has been touched by suicide or a parent who has wrestled with suicidal ideation and/or attempts, this sling serves as a reminder of strength -- the semicolon to pause where a period could have ended the sentence.

Is it normal that everything he touches somehow turns into a gun?

 

Try viewing this on black with B l a c k M a g i c

This sling was inspired by the Semicolon project. If you look closely, you'll see that the paisley in the sling are snuggly semicolons -- maybe mama and baby, maybe daddy and baby, maybe an aunt or uncle or grandparent. For a family who has been touched by suicide or a parent who has wrestled with suicidal ideation and/or attempts, this sling serves as a reminder of strength -- the semicolon to pause where a period could have ended the sentence.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

These photos were taken at RUOK? Day events around Monash's Campuses.

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