Creative reuse, or what some people call “repurposing,” is
common practice among the ‘oily rag’ crowd. Seeing a practical and/or beautiful
use for something in a second life exhibits a form of thinking that is
simultaneously creative, ecological, and fiscally responsible.
Once a dangerous deck...
... now a beautiful, functional fence.
My talented wife spends many hours on a website called
Pinterest, where other talented wives post digital images of their ingenuity
and then feed off of the ingenuity of others. This feeding frenzy of creativity
is called ‘pinning’ and probably also ‘re-pinning.’ I don’t know much about the
site, except: 1) it eats free time; 2) there are some amazing photos from
re-purposers far more creative and talented than us.
Nonetheless, we do our best to make things for our home that
are functional, beautiful, and easy on the planet. One example is the pelmets I
made from rusticated weatherboards that we removed while re-cladding. Turning
the old, weathered cladding into an attractive interior feature required a lot
of scraping and sanding, priming and painting, and then some more painting.
This is what they do not show on Pinterest!
I’ve written about our pelmets before so I’ll put this
briefly. I inverted the weatherboards so that the scallop was facing down
(opposite of its orientation as exterior cladding), and ripped them lengthwise
with a circular saw to suit the width for different rooms. The photos show 1
and 1/3 weatherboards screwed together to make a tall pelmet reaching from the
top of the door in our ‘mud room’ to the ceiling.
Once a tagged weatherboard...
... now a pelmet.
Regardless of whether you like pelmets or not, you’ve got to
admit this was a fine reuse of a demolition material on site. Perhaps our best
example of such.
But judging from the two overenrolled window blanket
workshops we ran last month, the humble but effective window blanket appears to
be the most well-known of our eco-thrifty creations.
Yet, as with anything humble but effective, it has it
detractors. About a year ago – when I first wrote about window blankets in this
column – someone at the Saturday market passed on a comment from someone else
that went something like, “How many middle-class, middle aged, women are going
to put blankets in their windows at home.” Judging from the number of
middle-class, middle-aged women who came to our workshops, a fair number.
From my perspective, just because something is eco-thrifty
does not mean that it cannot be attractive. From a friend of mine’s perspective
(an eco-engineer working in the Indian Himalaya at 3,000 – 4,000 metres), “Warm
is always beautiful.”
Well kids, here’s your chance to combine these two
perspectives into one great holiday programme at the Sarjeant Gallery! I have
the pleasure to be working with art educator Andrea Gardner and artist Sue
Cooke to run a free holiday programme for children ages 10 to 14 to make window
blankets that are also works of art.
The programme runs 24th-25th July,
with other cool “Art Adventures with Recycled Materials” happening the 16th-18th
as well as the 23rd (ages 7-12). The programme is inspired by Sue’s
Paradise Project showing at the gallery, and funded by Horizons Regional
Council. Let’s call it, “The Fun Plan.” Please ring Sietske at the Sarjeant to
enroll.
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