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Red Wiggler - DIY Worm-Bin

A DIY wormbin for your Red-Wiggler farm. You do not have to spend a lot of money starting a worm-bin. Follow the basic guidelines for Red-Wigglers. You can follow the Easy steps to calculate surface area of a round wormbin.

Share you DIY worm bin for a  RED WIGGLER farm with us!

Sock Monkey - Reuse Old Socks

It never occurred to me that I can make reuse socks until I saw this ingenuous way of  REUSING SOCKS to sew a monkey. Get ready for a goofy, sock monkey that could soon become a child favourite for years.

(via wikiHow)

Do you have other ideas on reusing socks? Find other Reuse ideas here.

 

 

Tags: art reuse
Vintage Journal

This one goes out to all of you bibliophiles out there. Everyone can make a journal, but their book journals were by far the coolest I have seen.Each journal is a one-of-a-kind creation made from an old vintage discarded book. It is gutted out and transformed into a unique journal which contains the essence of the old book by incorporating art, pictures, library cards, etc. into its pages. Some even had inscriptions from the past owners.This just might be the perfect  gift of the season.

Via: bookjournals

Shredded Art - Books
If Scottish artist Georgia Russell needed another career she could choose to be a surgeon, for her work shows her great skill with sharp scalpels turning books, pictures, music sheets, maps and even currency into elaborate sculptures.Her shredded art is typically placed in acrylic cases, but the most spectacular “specimens” are in bell jars. A couple of her designs look like lung specimens in a way.The fine strips she cuts out of the books and other paper objects are all artfully arranged and sometimes it is not obvious they were once books.Source: englandgallery   Via: weburbanist
Junk-Mail Art

It’s true, the old saying, beauty really is in the eye of the beholder. Schimmel Art is created out of recycled junk mail, ads and flyer. While most people regard unsolicited mail as an inconvenience, this artist saw it as a free tool for self-expression.Her ultra-modern portraits are stunning too, her talent undeniable. The artist has even created custom portraits—could there be a better gift?“Every little ‘tile’ you see was once advertising ephemera and/or junk mail,” she says on her site “I recycle canvas and frames. Why throw them in a land fill when they can be recovered and reused?”Imagine having your resources delivered to you for free, on a daily basis, turning them into art that reflects your vision of life, then selling your work to other art connoisseurs who appreciate them.The New York born artist has beautiful life philosophies which she tries to portray through her art work.Check out her work! Via: schimmelart

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Green Furniture

How much oxygen did your furniture produce today? Yeah, this is not your typical piece of furniture.

Add some alive furniture to your lawn or garden with these neat looking environmental chair and couch.

Simply fill the frame with soil, spread grass seeds evenly over the dirt, press them in and water slightly. Watch your furniture grow within 10 days. Once the grass has grown, trim it and you have a cool chair and sofa that blends with your lawn!

A fun project for kids to build and maintain their own garden furniture during the summer.

Via: stlloftstyle
Living Wall Planters

Imagine wall art that was eco-friendly, added Mother Nature to your living room and was a constantly changing spectacle, and you will come close to envisioning something like the creative Living Wall Planters.

At $169, they are relatively good priced, especially since they are coupled with the entertainment and novelty value.

It is a very good idea, but as with most pioneering inventors, the first concept is by no means the best one. The Living Wall Planters gets full-marks for the idea, but the execution lacks the necessary sleek sophistication to make it popular and successful inside the home.

The cedar wood frame is packed with a metallic grid of pockets for the soil and plant roots to sit in, which allows for the plants to sit upright on the wall. Hidden from view is a basic watering and reservoir system that slowly feeds the plants and ensures there are no leakages (on your stylish wall-coverings or furniture).

Once the makers address the ‘look what I built in my backyard’ appearance and inject a little more aesthetic appeal to their design, they will have created a whole new trend in wall art and household gardening. Until that day comes, it’ll be best not to remove any existing works of art from the walls in your home, and instead, maybe look to use the Living Wall Planter to decorate the exterior walls of your living space.

Source: gardeners Via: thegreenhead

PC ART  - Recycle

Artist Sandy Smith has thought of a wonderful way to recycle old PCs and monitors. Smith designed a piece of art named Mauritian Sunset for the Great Artspectations Exhibit at Embassy Gallery in Edinburgh, Scotland. The old PCs and monitors are installed and set up to approximate a sunset.

Geeks and tech fiends, however, might be far more interested in the hundreds of CPUs and network of wires on the back of the installation. All the monitors used were donated by the Glasgow School of Art.

Source: sandysmith

Hubcap Creations

These beautiful sculptures have charisma and character. They are designed by Ptolemy and are made from auto-mobile hubcaps that were found lying about roadways and junk yards.

Each Hubcap Creature is made from 100% recycled material and often show the scars of their previous existence, which simply adds to the charm and beauty of each piece. Prices range from $300 to $1,000 depending on the value of the material and complexity of design.

Fashion

A couple of top designers have teamed up to launch Recycle Now Week to promote their passions for fashion and raising environmental awareness. They designed dresses out of trash, recycling old packaging, cans, newspapers and more, proving waste can be made in to striking fashion with the right touch. Even a tiered ball gown of recycled denim looks good.

Via: telegraph

From newspapers to your wardrobe! Do you picture yourself wearing a mapbelt made of recycled newpapers or carrying a hip trendy newspaper bag? This one of a kind products were thought up and designed by four brilliant Swiss entrepreneurs. If you are in need of something customizable, colorful or black and white, waterproof and Swiss made, take a quick glance at their website! Choose a specific part of a newspaper and the language that you would like your bag or belt made of, select the model that makes your heart beat, wait a few weeks until delivery, and enjoy. It doesn’t taste as good as the Swiss chocolate but it will still give you a taste of being eco-friendly while trendy!

Via: primecut.ch

How cool is this- a courier bag made of a real gentleman’s business suit. 40x60cm and complete with a very hard wearing recycled seatbelt as the shoulder strap, for a mere 180 bucks AUS, you probably could make this at home for a fraction of the price- well your price, I’m not sure your father would appreciate you recycling his number 5 pinstripe 2 button for the cause..

Source: vandashop

Rubber Jewelry

Christiane Diehl is a jill-of-all trades; in addition to her line of recycled rubber jewelry, Diehl also dabbles in landscaping and photography. The rubber used in Christiane Diehl’s jewelry line comes from reclaimed bicycle tubes and air mattresses. Diehl cuts the rubber into tiny pieces and strings them together by hand. In these pieces by Christiane Diehl, the rubber’s properties appear transformed. I don’t see an old bicycle tire, but a strip of grosgrain ribbon or delicate fringe fabric instead. Through her work in landscape architecture, photography, and jewelry design, Christiane reveals a deep interest in the significance of everyday details. Her rubber jewelry exemplifies this work– proving that everyday, and often overlooked, material can be transformed into something unique and unusual with a bit of creativity. Visit Inhabitat

Tyre-Art

Christopher Griffith’s third book, “Blown,” spins roadside rubber into art. After six years of hunting down and photographing shredded tires left as rubbish on the highways of the United States, the graphic volume has been released. The images show the violent destructiveness that results when a tire explodes slicing and tearing it to bits, yet the photos look oddly fern-like to me. “Blown” was launched November 21, 2008 and is available from Auditorium Editions as a hardcover linen edition.

Visit his website:  "BLOWN"

 

 

Earthworm Composting with Red Wigglers

Earthworm Composting: Worm composting is the decomposition by a type of earthworm called  RED WIGGLER Eisenia fetida which eats your organic raw food waste and leaves rich compost and a liquid fertiliser in return. Worm Castings Worm castings are the richest form of natural fertiliser known to man. It promotes ahigher than average growth in plants (ideal to start seedlings, when mixed withpotting mix or as a top-dressing around plants).

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Green Tip

Peat is still used extensively around the world in the garden and as a fuel. Peat moss is also a gardener's favourite, but our peat and peat moss consumption is wreaking havoc on wetlands where these materials form. Use an alternative like coconut coir: green tips