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Sunday, December 21, 2014

starting my upcycle with Wood

Today I would like to start on one of those new directions I have for this blog.
For most of my life I think I have been something of a scavenger. Making good use of the things others did not.
I have aspirations of writing a books about a 2nd hand life, but for now I want to focus on creative uses for things many other people would toss away. I will organize this mostly on material or source. I write this not only to suggest creative way to enhance your life directly, but as possible ideas for objects to sell. Value added to something you got free or nearly free is all profit for you and worth your time to go get it. Details on how to make most of this stuff can be found with a little internet research. This is just a place to get you thinking.
 So today I will start with the a simple material that is typically all around us though sometimes hidden from view.

WOOD

Sources: broken furniture, twigs, firewood, lumber scraps, pallets

Some skills with a simple saw, hammer, sand paper and pocket knife needed to make the best use of this "free" resource.

Things you can make from wood


Home decor:
  • Boxes: use molding scraps and thin plywood to make open boxes.  Create small open boxes and add sand as a safe decorative place to put pillar candles.
  • Ornaments: take turnings from old crib rails, cut them to a pleasing size and paint in festive colors. add a small eye screw to the top to thread ribbon for hanging or attach as knobs in ceiling fan pull chains. Fresh twigs can be bent into small or large wreaths to hang on a tree or your front door.
  • Small shelves: made from moldings or the wood found inside that old sofa sitting on the curb. 
  • Lamp: Use the wood from the old sofa and some lumber scraps to create a one of a kind lamp. You can glue them together in such a way that you won't have to drill for the cord.
  • Game pieces: use small pieces of tree branches to create rustic chess or checker pieces. Wittle down a twig to create cribbage pegs.
  • Other furniture: Willow twigs furniture, scrap lumber and salvaged wood from pallets and old furniture can be remade into chairs, stools tables.
  • Cutting boards and trivets: Glue together scraps of wood into a sheet, then cut to shape and sand till smooth. Finish with oil made for cutting boards.
  • Picture frames: miter cut scrap molding or even rustic barn wood to create frames.

Jewelry:
some bamboo tiles salvaged from an old table mat, marbled with salvaged spray paint and turned into pendants
  • Use small pieces of exotic or highly figured wood to create pendants and beads for your jewelry. The easiest way might be to drill a series of holes in a thin piece of wood and then cut them into cubes with the holes centered in each bead. Sand and paint or lacqer.

Outdoor/Garden:
  • Use pallets to create sheltered areas for delicate plants, or create a compost bin. Twigs and branches can be woven into fantastic trellises and even fences for the garden.
  • Use shavings from hard woods like hickory, maple, birch or fruit woods for smoking. Each type of wood adds a subtly different taste to smoked meats. (do not use evergreen wood or exotic hardwoods)
  • Build bird feeders and bird houses from firewood or scrap lumber

Toys:
  • Blocks are easy to cut from scrap lumber or leave them in irregualr shapes and paint them in bright colors. Add pegs and holes to the blocks in random ways to add another dimension to building blocks.
  • Carving skills can create anything from a simple wooden snake to something amazingly ornate.
  • A broken rocking chair could become a rocking horse.
  • Puzzles are also easy either with a jig saw or by stacking cubes into a matrix. laminate a picture on one side, cut apart the cubes and turn another blank side up on each cube the laminate another picture, cut apart. do this until all six sides of each cube is part of a puzzle.






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