Category: Uncategorized

Newspaper Wood: Paper Pages Turn into Wood

Newspaper Wood: Paper Pages Turn into Wood

NewspaperWood by Vij5 and Mieke Meijer is a unique example of upcyling materials and flipping the resource to product process.  Instead of using wood as a source to make paper, NewspaperWood uses the paper to make wood.  The design came out of Meijer’s project at the Design Academy Eindhoven.

For a student design project, Meijer took stacks of newspapers, glued them together, and rolled them into a tight ‘log’ that he left to dry, deform and harden.  After they ‘cured, ’ these logs could be used as building blocks that could be cut, carved, routed, and used in place of normal wood.

The NewspaperWood has grains and rings similar to a tree. Each slice has a different cross-section of print with its own visual properties.  Years later he collaborated with the Dutch design team Vij5, and he began to roll out real products based on these reconstituted pieces of ‘timber.’  Out of this came a series of practical and experimental that use recycled newspapers in new ways that include lamps, jewelry, and other household objects.

For an exhibit in Milan at Salone, Vij5 invited other designers to create products using the NewspaperWood material and the products can be seen on the vij5.nl website.

Image Source:
www.vij5.nl

Links:

www.vij5.nl

miekemeijer.nl/

 

The Bay vs. The Bag

The Bay vs. The Bag

With no snow and lots of wind, at this time of the year it is common to see plastic bags stuck in trees, bushes, and blowing down the road.  Some cities like San Francisco have been working to ban plastic bag use.   San Francisco has prohibited the use of plastic bags at large supermarkets and chain pharmacies since 2007 and a new law has now expanded this ban on plastic bags to all retailers citywide.  Instead of the plastic bag, the stores may distribute BPI certified compostable bags, paper bags made with a minimum 40% post consumer recycled content, or reusable bags.

A video was made by Free Range Studios that used stop motion animation to show how bags can affect natural areas like the San Francisco Bay.   The short piece shows a woman who gets overwhelmed by a tidal wave of bags.  The video got attention of ABC news and Youtube, who featured it on the front page.  The video later was credited as having a huge impact on the bag ban in the Bay area.

Crabs, birds, and an ocean are made of plastic bags in the piece which ends with a call to action of “Stand up to plastic bag pollution.”  The video is viewable on Vimeo, and also on Free Range’s website.

 

Image Source:
Bay vs. The Bag – Video on Vimeo

 

Links:

Bay vs. The Bag – Video on Vimeo

www.savesfbay.org

 

DIY: Make your own Projector out of a Cornflake Box

DIY: Make your own Projector out of a Cornflake Box

Today I was checking out the Lumen Festival’s website which had a link to directions on how to build your own projector out of a cardboard box, a lens, and a small lcd.  The instructions and pictures are on instructabes.com, my fabfav diy site.

There are step by step instructions of how to build one.  The pictures show how to do it using   a cereal box, a pringles can, and various small electronic parts.  It seems pretty easy to make, just a bit of work to find a lens and LCD monitor.

In recent years, projectors have been getting smaller, brighter, and cheaper.  This DIY version does not seem to be the brightest or smallest – but it is cheap and adaptable.

I’m thinking of having my Media Installation class work on building one by the end of the semester and telling my brother who puts on a big Halloween show for his neighborhood to take a look.  He could definately use one for the upcoming Halloween pirate show next October.

Image Source:
Make Your Own Homemade Projector – Instructables.com

Links:

Make Your Own Homemade Projector – Instructables.com

Youtube Video of the Projector working

Construction and Destruction:  Marjan Teeuwen’s Abandoned Building Art

Construction and Destruction: Marjan Teeuwen’s Abandoned Building Art

Dutch Artist Marjan Teeuwen changes abandoned buildings into art by working with debris and upcycled building materials.  Her technique involves layering fragments of debris, then taking photographs and films of the final constructions.

Her project Destroyed House done in 2008, was created in a house that had an adjoining ice cream parlor.  The work was done in close cooperation with a contractor in order to remove ceilings and floors, move walls, and to create viewing holes in the structure.  She calls the works architectural sculptural installations.   Many of the materials used in Destroyed House were from the house itself .

In writing about her work, Teeuwen writes, “The literal breaking away of parts of floors, walls and ceilings signals a further accentuation of the polarity between destruction and construction. There is a balance between order and chaos, balance and imbalance, aesthetics and anti-aesthetics, refinement and crudeness.

The photographs of her work emphasize the careful layered materials in contrast to the frame of the buildings, which appear to be on the verge of collapsing.  The effect is an image of order and disorder and the relationship of construction to destruction.

Images of her projects can be seen on her website at  http://www.kw14.nl/

Image Source:
Marjan Teeuwen Website

Links:

Marjan Teeuwen Website – http://www.kw14.nl/