Wednesday, April 8, 2009

TADELAKT-THE FINEST OF LIME PLASTERS.



Tadelakt is an ancient plastering technique known by Europeans and North Africans for more than a thousand years. Originally used for waterproofing cisterns and steam baths (also known as hamams), people soon discovered its irresistible aesthetic qualities and started to use it as a decorative finish.
Tadelakt creates a surface with a lot of depth, a subtle shine and a natural color variation depending on how it is applied and polished. The plaster has an infinite number of ways in which it can be finished, slightly undulated from being polished the traditional way with a stone, distressed, slightly pitted, multicolored, stenciled, decorated with sgraffito techniques, or completely uniform. One of the remarkable characteristics is that however much life the surface has, it always feels like the finest silk to touch. as always we use product from Stucco Italiano because it gives our costumers the finest results.
We ask you, our customers to tell us what you want , what is your dream.
Please come and visit our booth at the Four Corners Green Living Expo, on the 18th and 19th of april 2009, at the Durango fairgrounds Colorado.(For those of you who live in Telluride, please come down, it is only a two hour drive)
We will be showing Tadelakt, venetian plasters in many variations and American Clay plaster finishes.
We are looking forward to seeing you.
Lars Hansen.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

About our company.


This posting is a little history behind Hansen Handcrafted Finishes, for the blogging folks that have not discovered our web site yet.

I grew up in old Europe, in towns with narrow streets and cobble stones, old houses and towers mostly finished with lime. I might have been 4 years old when I first lime washed with my Grandfather on the homestead and my fascination with the natural materials never left me. After working on stunning castles, manors, and cathedrals, I came to the USA where I founded Hansen Handcrafted Finishes with a commitment to providing our customers with that European timeless quality, the best of craftsmanship and all natural plasters and paints. On this continent with a lot of Faux Finishes being applied, we have found a solid platform of costumers for the real thing. We apply venetian lime plasters, tadelakt, clay plasters, and natural paints, providing green healthy finishes in traditional and contemporary homes throughout this continent and Europe, with our primary customer base in Durango, Telluride and the rest of Colorado.
Our company has the background and the quality, the only left for you is to ask yourself, "what do I want?" Dream it up and give us a call.
Lars Hansen President and founder of Hansen Handcrafted Finishes.
1 970 247 9702

Friday, February 6, 2009

Stucco Italiano Denmark.

As a part of my trip to my home country Denmark this winter, I went to visit the folks from Stucco Italiano there, Ole and Helene koeie. They welcome me in to their home, office, and training facility on the beach of northern Zealand (Sjaelland). We had a great conversation about craftsmanship and plasters, while they showed me around their home, of course it had been plastered by Giovanni Polistena with wonderful materials from Stucco Italiano. Two things I really enjoyed hearing was how Giovanni always talks very highly of Aaron Cohen from SAFS, and also that Mr Polistena and a crew is going to apply roughly 1900 square feet of venetian plaster in Amalienborg castle, which is the residence of the royal danish family.
Lars Hansen.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

American Clay workshop in Denmark.


On the 22nd, 23nd and 24th of January I conducted the first American Clay workshop in Europe, more specifically in my home country Denmark. I have for a while been working on setting up my dear friends and colleagues in the field of working with natural materials Flemming and Karen Abrahamsson from the company Fornyet Energi, as the European distributor of American Clay. the enormous amount of foot work has panned out very well, and the workshop was a very positive experience for everybody. The participants were all people having experience with clay in some form, clay builders, clay plasterers and masons, this will ensure a high quality installation to properly show off the capacity of the product, and we will probably not have to wait long to see pictures, since the first customer booked an installation just from seeing the base coats during the first day of the workshop. The house in which we held the workshop is from 1919 and was added on to last year, it is still under construction, and we are looking forward to displaying pictures of the finished project.
Five people had allready signed up before we were done with the workshop, and I am very excited to conduct the next one, and continue to be part of reintroducing clay as a building material in Europe.
I am here also bringing you a photo of the first American Clay wall in Europe, the wall was an exterior wall, but now enclosed by glass functioning as a sun room. It was very bumpy and uneven, and that being part of the beauty of the old farm houses i kept just enough of that to make the wall "shine" when covered with two coats of Enjarre, and burnt just a little bit with a steel trowel.
Lars Hansen.

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

The round tower in copenhagen.

Rundetaarn as it is called in danish, is the oldest functioning observatory in Europe. The tower built by the Danish king Christian IV in 1642 is 36 meters tall, which back then was enormous. What makes it unique in European architecture is that it is round , and even more so that instead of a stair case, it has a spiral walk way winding around a hollow column 7 1/2 times, measuring 209 meters from bottom to top. The entire spiral is constructed from brick vaults plastered with lime ,and then lime washed with pit lime. As allways this gives a very special light (that is when the lime wash has been applied properly to achieve the very intricate crystalline structure, necessary to make the pit lime last and perform its maximum.)
Today only amateur astronomers and regular visitors use the tower for its original purpose, and since the professionals left the tower, it has been used for a variety of things, one being a uni cycle race, maybe inspired by the Russian czar Peter the great, who in 1716 rode his horse to the top.
I visited Rundetaarn on the 8th of January 2009, and i can recommend visiting if you should ever visit the old Copenhagen.
Lars Hansen.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Vikings


Most people do not associate vikings with plasters, but nevertheless most viking houses were plastered inside. The mix was a dung-clay mix, and spread over a lattice work made of sticks. This provided not only draft proofing, but also temperature and humidity control as we know clay plasters do in today's houses.
Most vikings were farmers when they were not raiding, but what we usually hear about my ancestors are stories about their barbaric warfare. And with good reason, the vikings were truly great, not in height but in how far they were able to reach and conquer. These squat little human beings (seldom measuring more than 5 1/2 feet ) traveled far. The Swedish mainly went through the Russian rivers and as far as Greece, and the Danish and Norwegian vikings went more south and westerly to places such as Ireland, England, Spain, Italy, France and even as far as to the part of north America which today is U.S.A. Some of these destinations became permanent settlements such as the Normandy, which was clearly given its name by the men from the north (nor man).
I just visited the viking ship museum in Roskilde, where a mix of ancient and recently built ships are displayed. These ships are a major piece in finding out how the vikings were able to travel as far as they did,since the common long ship were quite commonly reaching top speeds of 14 to 15 knots.
Lars Hansen.