Apps for women; Planning your funeral; Twins; Armenian Threads
The latest apps for women. Saskia Sarginson discusses her novel Twins with her own twin daughters. Plus Jenni Murray asks, we hold wedding fairs so why not have funeral fairs?
A search for apps for women instantly points you in the direction of apps that help you 'lose the belly', 'track your period' or turn your phone in to a mirror. In a very male-dominated industry, we speak to app designer Jenny Griffith and to Belinda Parmar, founder of Lady Geek which is campaigning to inspire girls to change the world through technology.
Fiona Hendry is a listener whose husband has recently died. She sent us an email suggesting that we should be able to discuss more freely what we would want our funerals to be like before we become ill. We have Wedding Fairs, so why not funeral fairs? Jenni speaks to Fiona and to Dominic Maguire, from the National Association of Funeral Directors, and to Sue Barsky Reid who runs 'Death Cafes'.
Armenian Threads is a new exhibition in Manchester by artist Sarah Greaves. It showcases a number of embroidered wooden sculptures which have been influenced by figures found in old Armenian manuscripts. On the back wall of the gallery, strips of silk fall to the floor covered with prints of Armenian lace. Also on the wall are dried pomegranates [a symbol of Armenia] and members of the Armenian community in Manchester have decorated them with Marash embroidery [which is unique to their homeland]. Jenni is joined by Sarah Greaves and by Penny Evenson, Chairman of the Armenian Ladies Association in Manchester, to talk about the new exhibition and how Armenian lace and embroidery have played their part in its creation.
The Twins by Saskia Sarginson was published on the 29th August. It has been described as a gripping, emotionally engaging psychological thriller looking at the secrets we carry with us and the bonds between twins that can never be broken...even when the unthinkable happens. Saskia is an ex-magazine journalist and has twins (fashion students who are 22 years old). Saskia and her daughters Hannah and Olivia discuss how twins have a 'gloves-off' approach with each other and how the twin bond is as strong as that between a mother and child.
Last on
Clip
Chapters
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Thinking The Unthinkable
Why it's important to discuss death and funerals with your loved ones.
Duration: 12:16
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Twins
Saskia Sarginson talks about her debut novel, and is joined by her twin daughters
Duration: 10:48
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Apps for Women
From charting your period to finding rich men, who is designing apps for women?
Duration: 08:13
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Armenian Threads
Armenian Threads’ is a new exhibition in Manchester by artist Sarah Greaves
Duration: 08:38
Thinking The Unthinkable
Apps For Women
More and more women are buying and using smartphones, but who is designing the apps aimed specifically at women? There are apps to help you chart your period, apps that link you up with rich men, tracking devices for your boyfriend… What do women want from their apps? Jenni is joined by Belinda Parmar from the Lady Geek campaign, and Jenny Griffith, inventor and developer of a fashion app.
Armenian Threads
Twins
Saskia Sarginson talks to Woman’s Hour about her debut novel. Published today, The Twins is ‘a gripping, emotionally engaging psychological thriller looking at the secrets we carry with us and the bonds between twins that can never be broken…even when the unthinkable happens’. Jenni Murray is joined by Saskia and her twin daughters - Hannah and Olivia – who talk about what it is like to be twins.
Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Jenni Murray |
| Interviewed Guest | Jenny Griffith |
| Interviewed Guest | Belinda Parmar |
| Interviewed Guest | Fiona Hendry |
| Interviewed Guest | Dominic Maguire |
| Interviewed Guest | Sue Barsky Reid |
| Interviewed Guest | Sarah Greaves |
| Interviewed Guest | Penny Evenson |
| Interviewed Guest | Saskia Sarginson |
| Producer | Helen Lee |
Broadcast
- Fri 30 Aug 2013 10:00BBC Radio 4
Podcast
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Woman's Hour
Women's voices and women's lives - topical conversations to inform, challenge and inspire.
