Work In Progress
screen printing with natural dyes + eco bundling + batik + indigo = there's still more work to be done, but what I have here is oh, so satisfying.
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Work In Progress
screen printing with natural dyes + eco bundling + batik + indigo = there's still more work to be done, but what I have here is oh, so satisfying.
This holiday season I will have silk scarves, prints, and other handmade items for sale at the Broughton Exhange Pop-up Shop on 18 E. Broughton St. in Savannah, Ga. The shop will be open every weekend until Christmas, with new items added each weekend.
Paprika Southern wrote a great little blerb about the shop. Check it out, if you can or contact me about what I have in stock for sale. ;)
There are also new products in the works!
I have finally finished the peacock spider pattern from THIS post. enjoy.
Reunited with the kitties todaaaaaay!
Maud.
I am revisiting the infamous Garlic Mustard, from my past, in honor of my former AmeriCorps pals and forever soul sisters, who I got to spend time with over the last weekend. As an AmeriCorps NCCC team, Maple 5, laboriously handpicked millions of tons of garlic mustard from the forest floor, trail sides, and ravines of Wisconsin, all in order to save the surrounding natural ecosystems from the invading Garlic Mustarrrrrrd. That’s right; garlic mustard is an INVASIVE, non-native, harmful plant to the North American environment. It was brought over as a flavoring herb in the 1860s from Europe and has since spread like wildfire (except worse, because wildfires can be beneficial to the environment!) In Europe there are 69 insects and 7 species of fungi who utilize this plant as a food source, whereas in the U.S. there are a big fat 0 and are actually toxic to some insect species! There is one mammal that can benefit from North American Garlic Mustard, and that’s you! If it’s in your area, go out there and pick till your heart’s content, get some excursive, save the environment, and then go home and make some delicious garlic mustard pesto! YUM
Well, Photoshop has poop’d out on my laptop, so I won’t be able to post my finished Peacock Spider print until after Wednesday when MY NEW COMPUTER COMES IN! But until then…
Armadillidiidae
or you may know them as, pillbugs, pill millipede, woodlouses, or personally, roly polies; are more than just skittish bugs turn pebbles when poked. These bottom dwellers are important decomposers, who never urinate and who always recycle their own poop (by eating it) to replenish their dispelled copper, which is a vital element to their survival. They turn blue when sick, carry their young in pouches, and breathe through gills. GILLS. Which leads me to why I think they’re so interesting; roly pollies are not insects or bugs at all, they’re crustaceans! Crustaceans who don’t and can’t survive in water. Armadillidiidae are sea creatures forever banished to land! Or better yet, they are crustaceans who said forget the sea, I’m moving on up! Finally, getting a piece of that pie.
Or as J Dilla dilla dilla dilla might prefer DONUTS.
Leaves. They’re more different than they are the same.
A pattern I created, dedicated to all the leaf galls out there.
[couch image IKEA]