I decided to paint this week's Illustration Friday. Remember Chicken Pox? I got to enjoy them at age 29 — fun! I had gone to a women's event where someone brought her infected little beastie. She figured it was all adults, so no worry. Thanks for that!
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This is the ultimate in recycling. From the book" THE ADVENTURES OF CALI" written by Michele Lallouz Fisher that I illustrated, Zachary is smuggling his pet caterpillar (tomato worm) across country on an airplane. He has his "friend" nestled in an airport salad container.
But I was thinking that since I have been saving a lot of packaging lately, all of you must be as well. Here's what I am using primarily for my art and our garden.
For my painting I save the plastic containers from eggs, cookies and other items to use for paint containers, mixing colors and holding water.
There is a double sided plastic egg container that I love for my water colors and acrylics. It opens up so that there are 24 "holes" to put paint and the top folds out to become a large mixing tray.
Cardboard egg cartons?... I am saving these for my youngest visitors. They make great stacking toys and can be a "quiet" kind of noise when the buildings get knocked down. I also use them as planters. A seed can go into each egg holder with some dirt ... once it begins to grow I just plant the whole box in the garden. The cardboard dissolves over time and the roots of the new seedlings just go right into the ground. The separations keep the plants from competing with one another too.
I also love to use these light weight egg cartons for the armatures of paper mache sculptures.
Old cereal boxes and laundry detergent boxes can be reinforced and used upright or on the side with one side cut away as book or magazine holders. I cover mine with fabric and tape over that with heavy duty clear packing tape. Works great and keeps my smaller books and study guides in order.
Did you know you can make a great little terrarium from a plastic cookie container or cake or pie container. Put a little dirt, some small plants, a bit of water and a few pebbles or rocks into the bottom and then tape the top back on tightly.
I wash and keep all kinds of containers from yogurt, cottage cheese, and mayonaise bottles. The Mayo containers with the snap lid and a hole in it are great for paint projects for kids. Just fill with paint, store and when you need a color just squeeze enough out onto a small plastic lid or other small container you have saved.
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By: Laura Zarrin,
on 5/18/2009
Blog: Creative Whimsies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: contagious, boy, Illustration Friday, painting, Add a tag
Blog: Creative Whimsies (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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9 Comments on Illustration Friday—Contagious, last added: 5/25/2009
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By: Valerie Walsh,
on 5/17/2009
Blog: ValGal Art (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, Illustration Friday, Valerie Walsh, contagious, Home Sick, Add a tag
Blog: ValGal Art (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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My submission for Illustration Friday's "contagious" is a small illustration titled "Home Sick". This little house has the chicken pox and is very contagious so don't just pop over or you might catch some.
copyright 2009 Valerie Walsh
23 Comments on Illustration Friday: contagious, last added: 6/4/2009
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By: Ginger Nielson,
on 5/15/2009
Blog: Ginger Pixels (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: children, Ginger Nielson, recycle, reuse, contagious, Add a tag
Blog: Ginger Pixels (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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~ RECYCLING IS CONTAGIOUS ~
These days recycling is a necessity. We have so much packaging that we are drowning in it. But some of this stuff is really worth saving and reusing..several or MANY times over.This is the ultimate in recycling. From the book" THE ADVENTURES OF CALI" written by Michele Lallouz Fisher that I illustrated, Zachary is smuggling his pet caterpillar (tomato worm) across country on an airplane. He has his "friend" nestled in an airport salad container.
But I was thinking that since I have been saving a lot of packaging lately, all of you must be as well. Here's what I am using primarily for my art and our garden.
For my painting I save the plastic containers from eggs, cookies and other items to use for paint containers, mixing colors and holding water.
There is a double sided plastic egg container that I love for my water colors and acrylics. It opens up so that there are 24 "holes" to put paint and the top folds out to become a large mixing tray.
Cardboard egg cartons?... I am saving these for my youngest visitors. They make great stacking toys and can be a "quiet" kind of noise when the buildings get knocked down. I also use them as planters. A seed can go into each egg holder with some dirt ... once it begins to grow I just plant the whole box in the garden. The cardboard dissolves over time and the roots of the new seedlings just go right into the ground. The separations keep the plants from competing with one another too.
I also love to use these light weight egg cartons for the armatures of paper mache sculptures.
Old cereal boxes and laundry detergent boxes can be reinforced and used upright or on the side with one side cut away as book or magazine holders. I cover mine with fabric and tape over that with heavy duty clear packing tape. Works great and keeps my smaller books and study guides in order.
Did you know you can make a great little terrarium from a plastic cookie container or cake or pie container. Put a little dirt, some small plants, a bit of water and a few pebbles or rocks into the bottom and then tape the top back on tightly.
I wash and keep all kinds of containers from yogurt, cottage cheese, and mayonaise bottles. The Mayo containers with the snap lid and a hole in it are great for paint projects for kids. Just fill with paint, store and when you need a color just squeeze enough out onto a small plastic lid or other small container you have saved.
My efforts are puny compared to some others. Do you have great ideas for recycled items... that make a difference and might also create art, or give beauty to something or someone?
Post your ideas here...
8 Comments on Recycling can be ~ Contagious..., last added: 5/25/2009
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Great minds thing alike!!! ha!
I like your version!
Great illo!
I got them around age 11.
I was soooo upset that I had to stay home from school! :P
I had em when i was 23, and was extremely ill so I sympathise with you. I was living in shared accomodation so the whole building got em. As you say, fun!
Lovely illo!
Tom- You didn't want to miss school? That wouldn't of been me.
April-that sounds miserable!
Yikes...I can't imagine having them as an adult...it was bad enough when I was 6! Really cute rendering...I love your technique!
Ouchy itchy spots!!!
A little calamine might help!
oh man!! he looks like a sick little guy!!
I had them in kindergarten. Man... nothing like being trapped inside for weeks!
you got them at 29???? that's positively EVIL. but this little chap is really wonderful! :))