Used material has a story to tell. Take it up and spin it further. Grossklaus_Upcycling


Sonntag, 16. Dezember 2012

Bobbin Lace Pictures

Thread Painting


 An old folk technique rediscovered








Brain after an MRI scan
Featured on Street Anatomy 





My granddaughter loves flamingos. 3/23

My daughter's new dog inspired me already to a chrochet dog, a line art dog and now a bobbin lace dog. 3/23


Following Ricarda Mau's Marx (see below) 1/2022












Corona 12/2020

Picassos' dove, 10/2020


The Fearless drawn by Picasso. 6/2020

5/2020

4/2020
Found the drawing online. Thank you, unknown author!

 After a long time I was drawn to bobbins again. 3/2020
















2019








2018



















Some things do  not want to get finished. Meant for Christmas I finally got it done by Feb. 2017


















My father used to dig out the roots of trees he cut, clean them and turn them around for garden decoration. 2016

Weeping heart. A tribute to my late father. The pattern came from the stonemason; source otherwise unknown. Nov. 2015







Following M.C. Escher













Jade dragon








Mexican dragon


















My kids; from ultrasonic image and photographs




Easter 2015 came around with the question how to present unity / togetherness of two entities. Here is my solution to the problem.






My version of a tree of life




Green labyrinth Troy Town, Pimpern, Dorset











Medicine men from cave paintings














In 1995, NASA’s Dr. David Noever and his fellow researchers at the Marshall Space Flight Center studied the webs spun by common house spiders (Araneus diadematus) dosed with several drugs, including LSD, marijuana, benzedrine, chloral hydrate and caffeine (Noever, R., J. Cronise, and R. A. Relwani. 1995. Using spider-web patterns to determine toxicity. NASA Tech Briefs 19(4):82. Published in New Scientist April 27, 1995). The more toxic the drug, the less organized the web the spider created. Spiders on Marijuana could spin their webs reasonably well, but appeared to lose concentration half-way through. Spiders given Benzedrine, or speed, were said to have spun their webs “with great gusto, but apparently without much planning, leaving large holes.” Spiders on caffeine were incapable of spinning anything better than a few threads strung together at random. Not surprisingly, spiders given chloral hydrate, an ingredient used in sleeping pills, dozed off before they even got started.


From left to right and down:
Normal web - spider on LSD
Marijuana web - LSD formula
Caffeine formula - Cannabis plant
Caffeine web - Chloral hydrate (sleeping pills) web 


 The ancient Nasca lines of Peru

 











Samstag, 15. Dezember 2012

Upcycling

Bags & Nets ... and Hats!



Also on Tumblr!








My daughter demanded: "Bags are boring. Make a hat!" Here it is. (April 2014) 

 April 2015











June 2015












Shoppers & Co.


How to make your very own designer bag: Collect bags and nets from grocery produce and fruits: red one from oranges and clementines, orange ones from potatoes, green from zucchini, white/purple from garlic, and so on. Cut the advertisment and metal off. If the bags are dusty, wash them to remove the dirt; the result is worth the extra effort. Cut the bags and nets into stripes – beginners cut thicker ones. Then braid the stripes (use 3 or 4 as you wish) into long ropes.




Featured on "30 Tage 30 Dinge"
(2012)





It can be recommended to braid only the same colour at a time for better effect in the product – but this is entirely up to you. Once you have a long rope you can treat it as any regular wool you would work with: you can knit it or weave it – I have sown it together at the beginning always adding one round on top of the other.




Get some handles on or other accessoires you need for your product. Now you have created something very special out of trash! My biggest problem in all this is that I am running out of material all the time. I have been doing this since 2010 and still find it very satisfying. Have fun!






Knit the Thread


In the beginning I sewed the braids together as is known from Mexican basketry. This works very well accomodating all the different thicknesses the braids come in due to the varying starting material. Some nets allow the formation of small strings/braids which can be worked with thick knitting needles. In particular orange and lemon nets lend themselves to this methods. However, in the end I did not like knitting so much although it was fast. I seemed to need much more material and I had less control of the final form of the object. The rectangular basket pictured on the right was brought into shape by the addition of two strong and flexible plastic sheets from an outdated filofax.







 
 
Braided net strings knit with needles size 10.
The length of the needle determines the size of the final mat and therefore the width of the finished bag shown below. It was modeled using side insets made from green zucchini nets as well as some scarce purple and white garlic nets. (Dec 2012/Jan 2013)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 








Shoulder bag (Jan/Feb 2013)

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

Weaving

With grandmother's weaving loom and thin braids lovely patterns can be generated. This piece became a sports bag with ventilation on the sides made from the rigid perforated plastic you sometimes find covering fruit crates. (Feb. 2014)

 

 

 

 








  Jan. 2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Clothes and Fabric 



By the way: The ventilation comes in handy in shoe bags as well.









  

 

 

 

 





Again inspired by my artist-daughter I thought about clothing made from my favored junk. Here is the skirt and tie to be worn with the hat shown above. Not the dress code for work, but there is carneval...
(Sept. 2014)




 








Hard to see, but in this handbag the plastic "fabric" was used to stabilize the real fabric lining. In that way the bag keeps its shape. The shoulder strap was made putting one of those sturdy plastic bands, which they use to close packages for shipping (the specialist will recognize the also recycled fastener), inside the textile ribbon. Nov. 2014












For this shopper I used potato one-way bags at the base and for the little pocket in the middle as well as left-over orange fabric. (Sept. 2014)

 

 

 

Keep the Sack Intact


Even more straightforward: When the sack is still intact sturdy shopping bags are quickly sewn. The one on the right has a bottom made from a orange juice container to give the bag some volume. The shopping net below simply was fitted with a handle. (Oct. 2014)
The third uses a different kind of potato sack and has handles made from the same material. (Nov. 2014)

   

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 






More on the theme (Dec. 2014): I really began to like keeping the sacks intact, because they can hold some weight and weigh nothing themselves. Workflow:
1 - folding a sack as double layer for more stability, sewing the other side
2 - add a rim made from one of those sturdy plastic bands they use in closing packages for shipping
3 - add handles
4 -add some nice ribbon for the looks



























From here to there (Jan 2015):





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

For Kids

Quick idea to entertain kids and teach them repurposing. I used the fruit bags which are made from sort of plastic "sheets" so you can handle them like fabric. Fold them around a plastic flower pot (typical one-way trash from the last purchase of garden flowers), stitch it together or chrochet, add some decoration: Finished is a neat little present for grandma. May 2015







 
A joghurt container and a potato net plus some decoration. Aug. 2015

  











Work examples 2015


Dec.2015
Basket worked around a plastic salad bowl. Rim and handle were strengthend by sewing in an old power cord.



Sept. 2015





































 April 2015




















 

 Feb. 2015







 

 Jan.2015

 

 

 

 

 

 

Work examples 2014



Potato net, lining and a base - makes a nice storage basket/bag (Nov. 2014)

 








 






A regular bag with lining (Aug. 2014)

 

 

This time the braids were sewn onto a one-way plastic net-bag providing the grid. The bag is not as stury as the others, but a fabric lining provides stability as well as a neat optical touch. (August 2014)

 

 

Easter basket with Sorbian Easter eggs (April 2014)




Shoulder bag made of potato sacks with inside lining (March 2014)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  Work examples 2013

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Working round from a small base leads to an interesting boot shape at the rim of the bag (April 2013).

 

  May 2013

 

 

 

  

 

 

 



  Aug. 2013

 

 

 

 

Clutch


 








Sept. 2013  

  

 

 

 

 

 Gift wrap holder with chicken wire. Nov. 2013

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Work Examples 2010-2012







For a clutch thin thread should be used. Fabric was added for decoration. 





 


Multi-purpose baskets






















Shopping bags are always a good idea with this material. It is sturdy and colourful.


















For a try I left the plastic signs on the nets. I cannot recommend it, because weaving becomes difficult and the result is not very practical either. Call it art then.




This bag was first - pretty crude still.