þingeyri is located about 45 minutes South West from Ísafjörður. The trip used to be a bit longer before a tunnel was built through a mountain along the way in 1996, and in wintertime it was on occasion impossible to do even. The tunnel was a little over 6 kilometers long, and even had crossroads.
The views all the way were amazing, and the slight coating of snow we got on the mountains a day before made them really stand out when the damp weather turned them pretty dark otherwise. The fjord where the town is located in is wide and has plenty of rocky beaches. Lots of sheep still herding about. And a couple of Icelandic horses, too!
A view from one area of the fjord. http://i.imgur.com/o21VADA.jpg for full size. |
Tapestry on the works. |
Jewelry made out of puffin beaks, cod bones and fish leather. |
Smallsword made by the local blacksmith. Fish leather handle with cast bronze guard and pommel. |
Various items on show. |
Next we visited the þingeyri elementary school, whose students come work at the Fab Lab Ísafjörður weekly, to have a look at their workspaces and projects.
It was wonderful to see how much emphasis on handicrafts and art even the basic elementary schools here have, and you could see examples of what the students had created all over the school. The views out of the workshops were pretty inspirational, too.
At the town center we came across a mural painted by an American artist who had done an arts residency at Westfjords a while back. This is apparently how the locals sounded to them.
After a lunch at the local gas station we went to visit our main target, the old blacksmithing shop of Guðm. J. Sigurðsson & Co h.f. that has been in operation since 1913!
Read all about it after the break! (and also the Finnish abstract.)