Creative Cork Recycling

Posted on 04-25-2011 | Labels Assemblage, Collector's Corner, DIY, Geekery, Inspiration, Menswear, Sustainable Design |

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In honor of Earth Day this year, Anthropologie collected corks for use in their store window displays.  As someone who has been saving corks from my wine bottles for years now, my interest was piqued. I haven’t yet decided what to do with my collection, but now I’ve collected some great inspiration! Of course, it takes time to collect enough corks to make much of anything, and now my collection of dozens (maybe a couple hundred?) looks tiny compared to some of these large scale cork projects. So, I doubt I’ll be making a Corkxedo (yes, really, a tuxedo made of corks) anytime soon!

After Anthropologie breaks down their cork window displays, the corks will go to Cork ReHarvest where they will go on to become fishing bobs, brand-new flooring, paper pulp and more.

Cork is a green resource and is 100% natural, renewable, recyclable and biodegradable.  “Trees are not cut down to harvest cork, rather, the bark is harvested by hand every 9 years. Cork oak trees can live up to 300 years, so they are very sustainable resource! Approximately 6.6 million acres of Mediterranean cork forest extend across Portugal, Spain, Algeria, Morocco, Italy, Tunisia and France. These oak forests support one of the world’s highest levels of forest biodiversity, second only to the Amazonian Rainforest.”  -Cork ReHarvest Read the rest of this entry »

Gears Galore

Posted on 01-24-2011 | Labels Assemblage, Collector's Corner, DIY, Gears, Geekery, Inspiration, Mechanical, Neo-Victorian, Steampunk |

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I’ve long been intrigued by the visual geometry of mechanical components and have gravitated towards Neo-Victorian style and yesteryear’s machinery as well as the contrast of modern industrialization for as long as I can remember.  I was into Steampunk style long before I heard the term (and posted about it) three years ago. During my college years in Charleston, SC. I was surrounded by historic architecture and objects dating from Victorian times to the Colonial Era; these days I am surrounded by Victorian mining history in the CO mountains.

Gears are a common motif in the world of Steampunk; people are using gears and cogs that are usually salvaged from clocks, watches, bikes, and machines as well as representations of gears in a variety of projects. The following examples just begin to scratch a little rust off the surface.

steampunk guitars

Being a bit of a music nut, I love these – four of the many funky steampunk guitars as well as some crazy guns as featured on WebUrbanist.

gear switchplates

Make your own gear switchplate covers by following a tutorial at the Steampunk Workshop.

flash drive with gear

This flash drive is a stunning assemblage of tiny watch parts.

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Acoustic Botany

Posted on 01-23-2011 | Labels Experimental Design, Geekery, Inspiration, Music, Plants, Science |

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I am opposed to the modern practice of genetic modification, especially when it comes to our food supply, but the concept of selective breeding is thousands of years old and the idea has merit when used appropriately. David Benque‘s conceptual sound garden project proposes a selection of plants that are manipulated to create harmoniously orchestrated sounds, an intriguing combination of science and art. “Desired traits such as volume, timbre and harmony are acquired through selective breeding techniques,” the artist explains.

Acoustic Botany - Singing Flower

Acoustic Botany gas pods

There are thus “singing flowers,” “modified agrobacteria” that ingeniously take “sugars and nutrients from the host plant to encourage the growth of parasitic galls and fill them with gas to produce sound,” and “string-nut bugs” that have been “engineered to chew in rhythm” inside hollow gourds. (via BLDGBLOG)

Acoustic Botany bugs and gourd

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