Dumbo feather, pass it on header image 2

Issue 17’s landed…

October 22nd, 2008 by D feather

at Df HQ! It should have reached all our wonderful subscribers and stockists by now. This is what it looks like:


Photograph by Valentine Schmidt

[*Spoiler warning* If you want the five people in Issue 17 to remain a surprise until you receive your copy - read no further]

Photograph by Juliet Coombes

Alison Thompson : has been charged by twelve hippos, nine elephants and two rhinos. She has travelled to all the continents of the world, including the South Pole. She is an Australian who has been living and working in New York for more than 20 years. While she’s tried many things like being a mathematics teacher and an investment banker, it’s in film-making, and its ability to move people to take action, that her passion lies. Being spurred into action is something Alison knows about first hand. When the World Trade Centre was hit on 11 September 2001, she was one of the first there to volunteer. It gave her a taste for volunteering and she realised how easy it could be. So, in 2004, when the ‘Boxing Day’ tsunami hit, she jumped on a plane to Sri Lanka. The footage she took during that time formed the basis for ‘The Third Wave’, a film about volunteering which has captured the souls of viewers from Cannes to Sydney.

Photography by Ali McCann

Niels Oeltjen : In the interview that follows, Niels Oeltjen mentions ‘The Lettering Book’ which he used to use as a kid to create headings for projects and so on. Until he mentioned it, I’d completely forgotten it, but when he did the memories flooded back so strongly. It had a dark blue spiral-bound cover and you could trace all sorts of different fonts from it. For me it’s just a nostalgic memory, for Niels it was the start of his career. From doodling on school books, he started doodling on walls on the streets of Tasmania, became a graphic designer, has created a number of beautiful typefaces for Letterbox studio and worked on ad campaigns such as Tourism Victoria’s Red Thread campaign (which has featured a lot in past issues of ‘Dumbo feather’). He is also a fine artist and one of Australia’s upcoming illustrators, oh and a budding entrepreneur as well.

Photography by Joshua Morris

Shea Caplice : Any misconceptions you might have had about midwifery will surely be dispelled by listening to (or in this case, reading) the words of Shea Caplice as she talks about her years of practice as a midwife. Shea is Ms Practicality, Ms Sensible and Ms Sensitive all rolled into one. After delivering literally thousands of babies during her years as a private midwife and working in the public sector, Shea’s mission is now to educate women, and the public in general, about birth and midwifery and to help people connect better with each other when we need it most. Her extraordinary dedication to her practice and art might have personally taken its toll, but Shea still has more to give.

Photography by Will Brady

Craig Walzer : is one of the founders of Atlantis Books, a bookstore on the island of Santorini, Greece, which has been named one of the best in the world (http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2005/dec/06/top10s.bookshops). We all have outlandish ideas sometimes, but not many of us follow through on them. Craig and his friends did. Their idea was to create a bookshop that would provide them with a reason to get together, and a bed for when they did. Craig, originally from America, has also lived, worked and studied in Paris, England and Africa. In Africa he spent time in a legal clinic in Cairo working with refugees and, most recently, was engaged by Dave Eggers at McSweeneys Publishing to collate the stories of the people of Sudan into a book titled ‘Out of Exile’.

Photograph by Lynette Chiang

Lynette Chiang : abandoned her award-winning advertising career in Australia and hopped on a bike 15 years ago. First she rode the length of the UK, then ended up in Costa Rica from where she launched her assault on Cuba … again on a bike. Her book, ‘The Handsomest Man in Cuba’, is a hilarious and touching account of her three-month journey cycling the highways and footpaths of Cuba. Since then her wheels have scaled volcanoes in Hawaii, explored the hilly Chiapas and the flat-as-a-tortilla Yucatan in Mexico, traversed Italy from Fano on the Adriatic to Porto Ecole on the Mediterranean, and conquered the world’s highest paved road (all 16,000 feet of it) in Peru. Lynette’s bike of choice was a folding travel number from a small US company called Bike Friday. She now works for Bike Friday blogging and filming her adventures.

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3 responses so far ↓

  • 1 amy Oct 25, 2008 at 8:48 pm

    well timed inspiration yet again, thank you!

  • 2 dramaqueen Oct 29, 2008 at 5:48 pm

    Hi there.

    I discovered your magazine just the other day. There it was, sitting amongst the boring, shiny clone mags with their loud headlines and ugly covers. It was like and island of calm in a sea of business.

    I had to make it mine! I am a teacher and in my short breaks I have been taking a moment to read the stories that are so inspirational. I love your layout and design too. I am very glad that I found dumbo feather. I feel like I could fly too.

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