&
Advertise Here with Today.com
 

Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

May 29 2008

Etsy Feature: The Reclamation Project

Published by greengirl under Uncategorized Edit This

While searching for a gift for a yoga-loving friend on Etsy, I stumbled upon The Reclamation Project’s page . I’d done a search for the word “Ohm” in product descriptions, and I found this design:


I thought these signs would be beautiful in a home or garden, so I read a little more and found out that all of these pieces are made from rescued trash wood. I was intrigued, and I decided to contact the designer for an interview. Here’s what I found out!

1. What inspired you to start working with reclaimed and recycled materials? 

Ever since I can remember, I have been dragging home discards.  Found photos, broken fans, thumbtacks, hunks of rusted metal, weathered chunks of wood, you name it, too much of it comes home with me, but too much is left on the street.

I guess too much of my grandparents’ generation rubbed off on me.  They were good farm folk raised during the
depression who made everything they could–clothes, food, gifts–people for whom anything over $1.98 was too much.  At least, I’ll use them as an excuse for my compulsive hoarding!

For years, I had been trying to figure out what to do with it all as I realized I wasn’t always fixing
what was broken, wasn’t always using what was perfectly usable and wasn’t selling most of it at garage sales, just feeding the increasingly larger and larger free pile outside of my house.  I realized that I could make more of a difference by making and selling art created from the waste rather than just working in a non-profit as an administrative assistant.

2. Where do you find your wood?

Free wood is pretty much everywhere.  But different kinds of wood end up in different types of places.

Early on I was constantly looking for pallets to make cold frames and raised garden beds, so i haunted industrial areas.  I then began to make functional, not decorative, birdhouses and bathouses out of cedar fencing and began to get a lot of wood via Craigslist as people replaced their old fences.

Lately, as I’ve begun to make nature scenes and portraits, I’ve been working with cabinet doors, scraps of shelving and plywood that I mine from the dumpsters in gentrifying neighborhoods, which has led to some interesting conversations with homeowners. Most recently, I’ve run across some bamboo plyboard that I’ve have good luck with in my repeatable, 3 Lil Birds [Bamboo] .

3. I noticed many of your pieces are Eastern-influenced. What is your connection to Eastern thought?

I’ve always been drawn to cultures that put a premium on preserving the natural to provide for the future. When I was in middle school I was introduced to Taoism and the I-Ching, which slowly led me toward seeing the poetic inevitablity of the natural world.  All things decay, all processes of respiration and life produce waste, yet from this decay springs forth life, balancing the system.

Right now, I’m reading “Farmers of Forty Centuries” which is a travelogue of pre-industrial age Japanese, Korean and Chinese agricultural practices at the turn of the Twentieth Century.  At first glance, the culture seems very pastoral, a slow-paced peasant life, but further studying shows how efficient an agricultural machine they were, all waste being used to maximize each parcel of land.  All outputs became inputs for the next growing season.  Through this reclamation, one can sense the cultural reverence they have for nature and leads me to emphasize the weathering, oxidation and inevitable patination that decay toward life brings.

4. Can you tell us a little about your process when you’re designing a piece?

Materials always dictate design for me.  I don’t try to make old materials look new again, so I have to find subject matter that relates thematically to the weathering but also to the average person.  And since I find that more people relate to something illustrative rather than abstracted, I make carvings of animals, positive messages in the form of Asian characters and nature scenes, sticking to simple and basic forms that allow the weathering to have equal prominence.

Mostly, I spend time looking at the wood for patterns in the grain and knots and colors I can manipulate. For larger works I use the viewing of them as a place to talk about the context of how or why I am able to make art from these specific materials.

Recently, I have had shows with carved portraits taken from photos I find in neighborhoods in the process of
gentrification.  These I use to examine parallels between the way our society excessively consumes and discards products and how we similarly disregard our heritage and memories, historical integrity, cultural values and belief systems.

I also make Heads_on_Sticks, garden stakes with funny or poignant names, from 4 X 4 blocks and construction hardware.  I do a lot of sorting of these little bits until the face of a character appears to me.  So I try to stay open to what the materials want to “become” as I reuse them.

5. Is there anything else you’d like to say about your work or your commitment to remaining sustainable?

If anything, making art and craft out of reclaimed materials has given me a place to help educate others to recycle and reuse more in their own life.  I do a lot of street fairs and talk to as many people about what they are going to make as I do to people who are buying things.  That makes me happy.
See more at The Reclamation Project

Advertise Here with Today.com

One response so far

May 20 2008

Today’s Green Tips.

Published by greengirl under Uncategorized Edit This

Today’s green tips come from The Environment Equation: 100 Factors That Can Add To or Subtract From Your Total Carbon Footprint by Alex Shimo-Barry.

1. Did you know that microwave ovens use a third less energy than conventional ovens? If you do a quarter of your cooking in the microwave, you can reduce your annual carbon emissions by 55 pounds.

2. Downsize! Adding only 500 square feet to the size of your living space can add more than 3,600 pounds to your carbon footprint.

3. Switch to washable diapers. In the United States alone, the production of disposable diapers uses 3.5 billion gallons of oil a year, which is about 60 times more waste than cloth diapers.

4. Public transportation and close-knit living quarters available in city life reduces your carbon footprint, to the tune of 6,174 pounds a year.

5. Don’t listen to the myth: don’t let the car engine idle. Shutting it off and turning it back on will NOT use more gasoline.

No responses yet

Apr 17 2008

Women’s Conference On Sustainability

The Nature Conservancy is sponsoring a Women’s Conference on Sustainability the first weekend in May. It will take place in beautiful Jackson Hole, Wyoming, offering the women in attendance the opportunity to enjoy the gorgeous natural scenery in the countryside. With events including topics related to the arts, spirituality, womens’ special interests in the environment, and what women can do to make sure that we protect our environment for the future, it promises to be an enlightening experience. The participants who are interested in getting up early can even hit a yoga class before getting started to clear their minds and set their intentions for the day!

Keynote speakers include Melinda Kramer, founder of the Women’s Earth Alliance .

No responses yet

Apr 14 2008

Goodyear Needs To Pay.

Published by greengirl under Uncategorized Edit This

It might not be completely green-related, but this issue is an important one to those of us who are interested in fighting for social justice. Please join the campaign at The Point to recruit 10,000 people willing to boycott Goodyear Tires by Mother’s Day to protest their unequal pay for equal work. I truly believe our planet won’t survive if we don’t clean up our acts both on the outside and inside…

No responses yet

Advertise Here