Archive for May, 2008
Craftiest Bastard of the Week: My Right 2 Write
Each week we feature an advertiser from the Crafty Bastards Classifieds. This week the honor goes to:
My Right 2 Write is a project by three graphic designers looking to contribute their skills for the good of the local community. Out of a brainstorm came the idea to handcraft blank journals and to donate an unadorned composition book to a local needy school for every original journal sold.
My Right 2 Write’s books are hard cover marble journals covered in vintage & new wallpaper. The covers feature kooky googly-eyed monsters and clever cyberspeak that everyone can relate to.
To see all the journal designs, visit the My Right 2 write Website!
Crafty Classifieds for goodies like this and more!
Make stuff? Place a Crafty Bastards ad, it’s FREE!
Junk mail + Bamboo = your next party invitation
A few posts ago, my fellow bastard Tina Seamonster wrote about upcycling with those old t-shirts that just aren’t wearable anymore. Now I have yet another crafty recycling option for you- make paper. At the Pyramid Atlantic papermill we can make paper out of everything from junk mail to your old New Kids shirt (if you can let it go). No need to cut down virgin forests for your crafts- there are plenty of fibers that can be recycled. Most plant fibers can be used to make interesting paper, and the opacity changes depending how long the material is beaten in the Hollander Beater. In short, longer fibers are cut down in the beater and then pulled into sheets of paper.
A few months ago we had a group of kids at Pyramid who cut up their old jeans to make a pretty bluish paper. Also, old cotton t-shirts can be cut up and recycled into new paper, the color either determined by the shirt dye or added later if the fiber is white. In a class I took, we cut up a variety of shirts, and the strong red of one shirt mixed with those others to create a pretty pink.
Like yarn, paper can be made of many sustainable fibers like bamboo and seaweed. Check out this sweet journal made from recycled seaweed. Kozo (also known as Mulberry) is often used in handpapermaking, creating a beautiful translucent paper. The fibers can be harvested without killing the plant, thus creating a renewable resource.

Bamboo is another reusable fiber that we often use at Pyramid Atlantic to make paper, but don’t worry, there is still plenty for the pandas!
For a quick, clear look at the Hollander Beater and Handmade paper, read Ray Rich’s page at http://www.sumi-art.com/my-hmp.html









