I'm really pleased with it and slowly enjoying the decorations I am putting up in my house!
The random ramblings of an eclectic eccentric who wends waywardly through a myriad of activities!
Thursday, December 08, 2022
Recycled Materials Christmas Crafts- Christmas tree window display- (used envelopes)
I'm really pleased with it and slowly enjoying the decorations I am putting up in my house!
Thursday, November 24, 2022
Recycled Materials Advent Calendar Craft activity
***EDITED!!! Sorry,not sure where the photos vanished to!!!!***
I saw the most wonderful craft activity for making your own Advent calendar of sorts on Instagram from a maker called Amber Lu who posts at @tulips_and_a_toolbox . It involved constructing your own cardboard forest of Christmas trees with a wooden base. I was itching to give it a go and decided to adapt it so you don't have to use wood IF, like me, you are not handy with a saw and wood or don't have the money to spend on a piece of wood. I really recommend the maker as there are loads of eco-crafts on there!
I wrote my own instructions for my neighbour to follow with their kids as I adapted the idea slightly to give measurements etc, but remember, this is not my idea and I was able to follow her post with very limited instructions from the very clear pictures she shared! My instructions are probably very over complicated but I thought it might be a good reading and doing activity for the kids at school!
Materials:
- Cardboard box
- 24 cocktail sticks (possibly only 21 as you are cutting some in half)
- Black thin felt tip pen
- Glue (I used PVA)
- Brown Paper tape (or decorative tape)
Making your trees
1. Cut a rectangle- one side from a cardboard box. Be sure to remove all labels and avoid printed parts.
You can adjust the dimensions to make it smaller and larger as you see fit or to match your box size but I found a rectangle with a width of 14/13 cm was good.
2. Measure 6cm along the length (long edge) and mark it with a pencil line.
3. Now draw a line to the other side of the box. You have a rectangle that is 14cm x 6cm.
4. Half way along your 6cm width, mark a pencil mark at 3cm.
5. Draw diagonal lines connecting both corners of the other end of the rectangle with that pencil mark. You should now have an isosceles triangle.
5. The same end where you drew your 3cm pencil mark, mark 3cm along that edge of the rectangle you have drawn.
6. Connect that mark with a diagonal to the bottom corner of your rectangle at the other end. You now have 2 identical isosceles triangles that share a diagonal edge.
7. Continue to make more rectangles in the same way until you have 6/7 of them.
8. Repeat these previous steps but this time using a rectangle strip that has a 10cm width. Your triangles can also be 5cm instead of 6cm long in total (mark2.5cm along for the half way) . Make 6/7 of them.
9. Repeat these steps but this time with a rectangle with a width of 8cm.
10. Repeat these steps but this time with a rectangle with a width of 6/5cm.
11. Cut out your triangles. Discard the very end pieces that are not isosceles triangles.
12. You should now end up with 24/28 triangles of 4 sizes. (I made extra just in case)
13. Take a triangle and using a black felt tip or fineliner and draw a straight border around the edge of each triangle around 4-5mm from the edge. Do the same with all your triangles.
14. Now decorate the inside simply with dotted lines, lines, circles, line, dots, in various repeated patterns. Try to achieve as much variety as possible but keep as neat as possible.
15. You might notice I did make a couple of Christmas tree shapes rather than simple triangles. Do if you feel you can make symmetrically and cut easily. (harder with small kids)
Making your base stand
16. Cut 2 rectangles 30cm long by 15cm wide. (Feel free to make your measurements longer than mine. I probably could have been a little more generous with mine although I do like the crowded nature of my forest. E.g. make it 40cm long and 15cm wide.)
16. Glue them on top of each other to make a double thickness base and then use either brown paper tape or decorative tape to make a border around the edge that covers up the rough edge of the cut cardboard and goes just over the top and bottom layer.
17. Start with your tallest trees. Lay your trees out in a row along the length to check that they will fit along the length of the board when standing side by side without overlapping. Check you are happy with the arrangement. Keep them in this row whilst doing the same with all the other sizes.
18. Now, on the back of each tree, number them from 1-24 in pencil for the moment.
19. Draw 4 light pencil lines that are equidistant along the length.
20. Lay out your flat trees in order along your first row and mark a darker pencil dot where the middle of each triangle base is. Make sure they don't overlap. Do the same for the trees in the other rows.
21. Use a large safety pin to make a hole where all your marked dots are. Wiggle the pin around to make sure it makes the hole a bit bigger (Big enough for a cocktail stick to go through happily but not fall over).Make sure you go through both layers of cardboard. I used a double piece of funky foam to ensure I didn't make a hole in my table!
22. Mark on the numbers by each hole. I use a black fine-liner and made my numbers like calligraphy. I marked mine from front to back but in retrospect,when I started putting the trees, I think it would be nicer to start with the back row as the first numbers so you get to see all the trees face on completely before the next row goes in front.
24. Number your trees in black pen right at the top of each tree tip in nice letting (not too big!)
Adding cocktail sticks to trees*( you could do this after you make the trees but I waited to check my measurements)
25. Now use paper tape to tape cocktail sticks to the back of each tree. Start with the back row trees Check you are happy with the height of them. They need to be the tallest so they have the most stick showing at the bottom. Make the next row of trees a bit 'shorter' by how you position the stick.
26. For your front row, cut your cocktail sticks in half and keep only a little of the cocktail stick showing at the bottom.
27. Check that all your trees will go happily into their holes.
28.Now gather up your trees into a small basket, bag or tray and lay them nicely beside your base.
29. Each day of Advent, add a tree to your forest. Feel free to sing Christmas tree themed songs or carols! You could even write one in tiny letters on the back of each tree to sing. By the 24th December, you will have a forest.
30.As an optional extra,you could cut out a golden shiny star on taller skewer and make a hole for it above your Christmas tree height as an extra for Christmas day!
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I was so pleased with my Advent calendar and cannot wait to use it in December.
The thing I liked most about this was that there is no plastic and the majority of the craft is reused cardboard box. 9 of my cocktail sticks were from eating olives in a restaurant (I made CBC and I only use ONE and kept the rest for this craft!).
It would be nice to make a little drawstring fabric bag to keep this all in for next Christmas. Haven't quite thought that one through yet!
Sunday, July 10, 2022
Plastic Free July: Days 1-10
Hi there,
As you know, I think about the Environment lots and try to make some changes and differences.
There's a great challenge called Plastic Free July which you can sign up for and they send you ideas for the challenge. There's all sorts of resources including those for promoting it to others, e.g. posters and the resources are tailored towards different individuals.
Here is a Calendar of things you can do.
My Mum and I sat and had a read through the calendar today to see which ones we do and which ones we need to work on.
A disclaimer here. When I share posts like this, it is never to shame anyone for what they do or don't do. I do it because I care passionately about these things and I know having a dialogue about them is an important part of change. I also hope it inspires people. It's not a brag fest either. There are plenty of unhealthy practises in my life which I need to change. If you take one thing from this post or find yourself in agreement or find it interesting, then I have achieved my aim. However, I will always challenge practises in real life which I think are just down to being lazy as the lazy TA who couldn't be bothered to wash out her Lucozade bottle so she just lobbed it into the bin instead of the recycling bin and then the subsequent TA who laughed and said she often couldn't be bothered either, found out after I expressed my disgust.
Day 1:
Join the Plastic Free challenge. Well, I joined in with this 2 years ago and it made me make some important changes and I am looking again at this challenge this year (to coin Ang's Words for the year) to see if there is any more I can do. If you even make a decision to try and join in with the challenge, even in retrospect and make one change, then that is progress!
Day 2:
Bringing your own shopping bags. I am good at this one. This one is ALL about routines for me. Once you have used the bags, making yourself replace them in the place you will be able to access them again when you need them is the KEY to succeeding at this. By the way, I include produce bags in this one too (which more often than not are old bread bags or junk mail bags). So, empty your shopping out and IMMEDIATELY put your reusables back in:
a) car boot,
b) under your car seat.
c) in your handbag
d) in your cycling pannier
e) in your coat pocket
f) by the front door
g) hanging on coat hooks with coat
h) in your desk drawer
i) in your work locker
j) in ALL of the above so you are NEVER caught short!
And if all above fails, CBC and I are TOTALLY stubborn on this one (at least when we are together). If we can carry it in our arms to avoid taking a bag, we will, to the point of ridiculous! We will load it back into the trolley and stick it all loose into the boot, we will walk down the road with our arms full. Once, I was in the supermarket and realised I'd forgotten my bags, I went and raided the Recycling Carrier Bag point to reuse someone else's old bag rather than admit defeat. Another time, I took the carboard box on the Flour shelf and from the fruit display in Lidl to avoid taking a bag- like we used to in the 80's and 90's.
Day 3:
Bringing your own drinks bottles is another really easy one that I assume that most people do. I have not willingly personally bought a bottle of water since at least 2018 except maybe once. I travelled to Italy by train (it took almost an entire day) and didn't buy a plastic bottle. My key to this was having a few reusable bottles (I took 4 to Italy). Yes, they might be heavier to carry but it is worth it. Again, I travel by my own steam a lot of times- bike, walk or train- so it's not like my lifestyle makes it any easier. Again, routines are your friend. Every evening when I get home from work, I refill my Stainless steel 750ml flask and replace it in my bike pannier. If I go out without my bike, I am in that mindset that I always think to put the bottle in my rucksack/handbag- having a few sizes would help if you are a minimal bag person - you could have a small one hanging off a karabiner.
Shenfield station (Platform 3) and Liverpool Street station (to the left of the main Circle Line entrance) both have Filtered Water dispensers so it's worth seeing if a station has a refill point. Or just ask.
Buying a nice reusable for a friend is a great Eco-friendly present.
Day 4:
I have had a few reusables over the past 10 years or so. Again, having more than one helps. Keeping one in your hand bag, bag, one in the car helps. Routine is king again. Wash and dry it when you get back and replace it in the best place for you.
I bought a Hunu collapsible Hot drink cup last week- it folds tiny and is perfect for travelling.
I am also very stubborn. If a place refuses my reusable or has no option for drinking in in something they will wash up, I make a point of changing my mind about wanting a drink from that establishment and saying my reason. I don't care if they think I am awkward. I always try to remember to ask before I order to find out what it will come in but I have been caught out once or twice.
Day 5:
Saying no to a straw is a tiresome one. Because, even though I make a point of always asking for no straw, I have been given one SO many times because they do it on Autopilot. At least they are mostly paper nowadays but still, I would prefer no straw. Say it clearly if you are refusing and say why- hopefully they will remember if you put emphasis on it.
If you go to Italy, the phrase for no straw is "Senza Cannuccia per favore."- I speak from experience! ;-)
Day 6:
Again, I am quite au fait with this one. Using what you have already is a great one! I make use of any suitable container for reuse. If you have plastic bags from products you've bought, use those to house loose things you buy. My Mum is the expert at this. In the Zerowaste shops, they always comment on the sheer variety of receptacles I use. Yesterday,I bought Mulberries in a Jelly Tots tube, Lentils in a biscuit tin, pasta in a posh chocolate box, tumeric in a yoghurt pot, apples in a bread bag, green beans in a magazine bag, broccoli in an old potato sack. Have a 'reuse' bag ready that you can grab ready. Any useful bag or containers get shoved in it.
Day 7:
I've sort of mentioned Loose produce and how I approach that above but I tend to try and look for those products that don't come in plastic and stick to those. Lidl is quite good for that. You can get Avocados, vine tomatoes, peppers, courgettes, sweet potatoes, aubergines, bananas, spring onions, onions, potatoes at most times of year and other seasonable ones. It does depend on where you live though but I try to always check if I am going somewhere, if there is an option where I might buy things.
I am lucky that I can easily travel to places to get loose options. The Milk and More does plastic-free options although they do cost a bit more.
Day 8:
Bar soaps and shampoo bars are a great way to avoid plastic and one we have embraced. They are great gifts to give or receive and a nice thing to give to Food Banks also. We have been using Lush's Montelbano shampoo bars for at least 3 years now and they last well. I have been using a nice Comme Avant Shampoo bar recently that my hair loves too. It was a present.
Day 9:
Do I need to mention the "R" word again? Routines are your friend. I bought a lovely bamboo set (and received another as a gift) and keep a set in my bag (in a makeup bag). I also just carried a metal set around with me before though. Wash it up when you get home. I put a set into CBC's glove compartment too so he always had a set. He's got his own set in my satchel too.
Day 10:
Plastic free cleaning products are great! Again, we've not bought things like washing up liquid, toilet cleaner, surface spray, descaler, bathroom cleaner for at least 3 years.
If you aren't lucky enough to have access to a Zerowaste shop (brands like Miniml, Sessi, Fill are very reasonable), you can order products from the Ocean Drop online from a myriad businesses. These come in tiny little boxes and are concentrate which you pop into an old bottle and add water and you have cleaning products ready.
And that's Days 1-10. I'm happy with my progress on these 10 items. I wonder what I need to work on next week?