• Blog

    I made paper

    I had intended this to be a fun project for the kids and I to do together. They liked ripping up the junk mail but as soon as I started blending the bits into pulp they both got grossed out. They wouldn’t hardly come near the dish pan that held the pulp. So it ended up being entirely my project while they played.

    When the paper was nearly dry when I decided I didn’t really care for the color of them. I sprayed them with a little more water then got out some walnut ink…still not satisfied I got out my kids watercolor paints and made squiggles, dots, splatters and lines all over them.

    I still don’t know if I’m excited about the end result mainly because I had an idea of what I was going to use them for but the wild colors won’t really go with the vintage appearance of the box I painted.

    I’ll likely make some more paper with different colors that will match the painted box better and use these for something entirely different.

  • Blog

    Recycle Man


    Alright…I met the challenge head on and created this little guy from bits and pieces of trash that would have otherwise ended up in the landfill. He’s not the cutest, sweetest guy around but he certainly carries a great message.

  • Blog

    Happy Earth Day!

    I am a huge recycler! I learned it from my dad. He was a depression era baby so everything was precious. He was always dragging something home that was destined for the dump. The house I grew up in and our cabin both had stairs leading down from the outside decks that were the stairs in the stands from old Met Stadium. Dad took as much as he could haul and store. I don’t know if the present owners of either place even know where their outdoor stairs came from but it makes me happy to know that dad did his part in saving some history.

    A dear friend of mine whose birthday also happens to be today put forth a challenge:

    Dr. E wrote “I want to talk a little bit about one of the things that means a LOT
    to me: Earth Day, another day we celebrate today. When Earth Day
    first started, people who recycled were considered liberals, tree
    huggers, and kooks. Composters were arrested in Florida and Colorado
    for having eyesores in their yards, and people who wore Berkinstocks
    were labeled “odd.” I may be a kook, and I may have a compost pile,
    but I believe that if you buy something, you do so with a purpose of
    using it until it has been used to its fullest potential. That’s why
    I believe we should use our found objects (anything destined for the
    trash) in our art and take our food waste to the compost pile. Let’s
    celebrate Earth Day by gathering found objects, then making wonderful
    art from them.

    Therefore, I challenge each of you to make something this week from
    one or more found objects.”

    I’m going to take her up on her challenge and will post my results later this week.