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Thursday, 30 September 2021

2021 Topic 12 : Sustainable Crafting with FP {by France Papillon}

   2021 Topic 12: Sustainable Crafting


The ethos of France Papillon is to be mindful. She has built her business around this beautiful principle. Not only does she create her art in a mindful way, and she encourages others too, how wonderful it is to have France and her wisdom within our team here at PaperArtsy.  What I wanted to tell you about was her actual craft space it's super efficient too! She likes everything to be in reach from her chair. This really forces you to think about what you really need, and what you can do with what you have within easy reach.
 
Early in the year, I remember France having a month where she went through her house to reduce unnecessary stuff from her kitchen cupboards, wardrobes etc..... oh you know like all that awful junk we have under the bathroom sink!! Some of this was easy for her, but every day the number of things she had to eliminate increased, so it really did make her think hard.
 
As crafters we tend to be pretty good at hoarding, but I think we are also getting really good at using up our stash. I feel like the first decade of 2000's was all about acquiring, and now 20 years later we are all getting our heads around the concept of actually using our stuff up. Yay!
 
Tell us in the comments below what you are doing to be more sustainable in your crafting habits!
~ Leandra

Hi everyone, it's France with you today, and I'm here to share with you the spread I made for my latest A Layer A Day art journaling challenge. 

This week's challenge is about starting to work on a new habit and as we are here to talk about sustainability, how about a little challenge to implement small sustainable habits in your creative process? Let me show you how I tackle it!

The very first and most important change I made to make my studio more sustainable, was to ban all baby wipes and kitchen rolls from it! No matter how daunting it might sound, it is actually pretty easy to do. I have a big rag to protect what needs to be protected and a small cloth for wiping and cleaning. I hand wash these every so often or... tear up and use in my creating process!

For the first layer of this spread, I sprinkled on some infusions and blended those with water. To protect my journal, I folded the rag underneath the pages I was working on. My entire journal is protected in one go.

The cloth came in very handy when I wanted to dab away some of the excess water before drying it.



For the second layer, I wanted to create a gradient through my PS258 stencil. Another way to keep my studio more sustainable is to be aware of my supply stash. That means that sometimes, like in this case, I don't have the exact paint color I would like. That is where mixed media comes in very handy! 

I used Black Knight infusions to tint some Snowflake Fresco Finish. The further down on the page, the more Infusions I added to create the gradient. I dabbed on the mixture with a sponge through the stencil.


I always pick my supplies in terms of versatility. That is one of the reasons that I like all my PaperArtsy stamp sets and stencils to work together: combining them offers so many more possibilities!

In the same way, I want the media I pick to do more than just one thing, which is the case of distress (oxide) ink. I used it to stamp and to add splatters on the spread by mixing it with a bit of water. And even water splatters work thanks to the reactivity of Infusions!
 


Working with Infusions gives you surprises sometimes, like the appearance of a pink spot on a blueish grey spread. To emphasize that, I sponged on some Pixie Dust Fresco Finish through my PS259 stencil as well as some watered down splatters. This would give me a nice nesting place for the focal point.



For the focal point, I traced the circle of the PS260 stencil with a black pen. I used the same pen to doodle around the spread. I stamped the wording from FP019 in the circle and added 2 stickers from my A Layer A Day sticker sheets. Remember this spread was for the challenge about working on new habits? You need to be zen about that change yet grounded enough to focus on it: life is change, change is stability ;)

The best part when cleaning up my studio after making such a spread is not having to throw anything away. "No waste was produced in the process! " One way of being sustainable while crafting :) Will you give it a try? Let me know how it goes!

Butterfly kisses,

Youtube: www.youtube.com/francepapillon 

Tuesday, 28 September 2021

2021 Topic 12 : Sustainable Crafting with I&D {by Jennie Atkinson}

  2021 Topic 12: Sustainable Crafting


There used to be a mantra that if as piece of leftover was smaller than 2 inches, you should throw it away. Jennie definitely doesn't subscribe to that train of thought and has got some wonderful ideas for the teeniest of pieces. She's definitely an advocate for sustainable crafting and when it's tea stained and curated into something lovely, who could possibly think differently?!
~ Keren.

Hi everyone, it's Jennie (Live the Dreamwith you today, and I'm here to share with you some ideas for using up all your scraps!

I am known for hoarding paper...small, tiny bits, that most people would put in the bin! But when combined with a little set of stamps, these tiny bits of (especially) tea stained papers can be pulled together into little collages which can then be used to decorate a small notebook (also made from scraps!)

Sustainable crafting....using EVERY little bit! 

When my grandchildren were here a few weeks ago they sorted all my "bits" into piles of different colours and we made "scrap" books for their homework notes. They love little flaps and secret places where they can write little bits and pieces and so normally go home with at least two or three. So my supplies were a bit depleted!


For the collages I have kept mainly to the tea stained papers and you will see from the little video walkthrough later that I have used the other pieces for the actual notebook. Ink and the Dog stamps are my absolute favourite stamps for these little pieces and each set has some interesting stamps that can be used as background or sentiments.



                                                                            Letters 4

                                    Letters 2                                                 Letters 6

Letters 6 has to be my most used I&D - who doesn't love the fragile dreams negative strip but the text and little sentiments of Letters 4 come a close second!

This close up shot shows how the text stamp looks on tea stained paper with all those different fonts making it a great background layer. A little bit of stitching on the layers also pulls it all together.


It's worth investing in some tiny tag dies as they make the best use of tiny pieces. I love when labels on clothes come with thee little pins - they make a novel way of attaching the tags.


The little text stamp from Clocks 1 and the Paris frank from ID10 are again two of my most used stamps. They are just the perfect size for little tags.



Larger labels such as this one from Letters 6 can be made into little pockets when sewn onto a backing piece of paper and again investing in a mini tag punch means every little piece is used.



Here I have layered tea stained papers with some coloured cardstock, the colour broken up by using a background text stamp. At this stage I have no idea how I am going to use these little collages and that freedom means I group things together which I might not have done.


The same stamps, but used in a different way on the coloured cardstock.


So what to do with these little collages? As I had some larger bits of the coloured cardstock I made a small notebook cover. I made a mat for the large collage by painting a piece of ribbed paper packaging with Fresco Chalk Acrylic (French Roast) and some lovely gold embossing around the edges.

The inside of the notebook was made using some of the larger pieces from my little stock pile of papers, including some of the PaperArtsy Tissue Packing Paper - I am becoming a huge fan of this lovely feel tissue! Some of the larger pieces were  made into flaps and run throughout the book.


As it is difficult to show this I have made a short walkthrough video so you can see what I mean!


I find making these little collages fun and without an end project in mind totally free and creative. They can sit in a box until I have time to use them and sometimes they find themselves as a topper for a quick make greetings card. 

I hope I have given you some ideas of how to use some of the smaller PaperArtsy vintage stamps and also how to then pull them together into a little notebook. 

As always thank you for joining me and happy crafting!

Jennie x

Blog: Live The Dream
Instagram: atkinsonjennie
 

Monday, 27 September 2021

2021 Topic 12: Sustainable Crafting TOPIC INTRODUCTION

2020 Topic  12 - Sustainable Crafting

Hi everyone, Keren here with a topic that's becoming increasingly relevant and for lots of you reading it, perhaps it's already a way of life. 
But is sustainable crafting more than just using a few more recycled products in your creative time? Is it something that we can all do better ? Thinking about the crafting products that we source - are there more sustainable options? Can the items we purchase, consume and recycle actually reduce our environmental impact ?

My Poppet ( how to make twine from leftover fabric strips)

We'll take an inside peek at PaperArtsy HQ and hear about the reasoning for their original decision to use red rubber and also look at other Creative's projects re-using and up-cycling. We're hoping that this topic will not only inspire us all creatively but that we'll reflect on our own purchasing, usage and disposal decisions and try and do more to preserve the world that we're stewards of.
We would love to hear about positive crafting changes you're making for the environment - do let us know about them in the comments so we can garner ideas from each other.


To start off with, here's PaperArtsy explaining how it all began....
 
'We chose 20 years ago to produce stamps in rubber primarily because it is a natural, renewable resource. It is also a safer environment for our workers to be in, compared to clear production, which involves a lot of chemical reaction and emissions. The positive features of rubber chimed from the outset with the vintage genre and design style and the benefits were many. We have never regretted this decision to choose to manufacture with a natural resource: rubber.
  • Rubber is durable, produces a crisp image and can handle lots of detail (particularly important for vintage-style stamp imagery). It copes with these challenges significantly better than the chemical polymer or silicone composition that clear stamps are made from. 
  • Rubber can handle extremes of temperature, so it can be stamped into a puddle of molten embossing powders with no detrimental consequences or you can iron other products onto your stamps to melt .... remember the days of ironing velvet onto a rubber stamp or Angelina Fibres??? So rubber is durable, for life, you will not need to dispose of a rubber stamp, you will always be able to gift it to a friend or sell it on secondhand.
  • The depth of an image is sharp and deep which is wonderful for stamping into clay or texture pastes and UTEE as mentioned above. 
  • Rubber accepts and holds all varieties of ink onto the surface more readily than polymersilicone  stamps. This is most noticeable with thinner, non permanent, water-based inks. An archival dye ink has oil in it, and that thicker viscosity helps the ink grab to the image, as do pigment inks, also thicker (so that they stay open longer for you to apply embossing powder). 
  • Solvent inks like StazOn, those are fast drying inks and will not damage a red rubber stamp, but the solvent can eat into polymer stamps if you don't clean up fast. And who likes cleaning up!? 
So for PaperArtsy, and the vintage genre stamps, knee deep into messy crafting, rubber was ticking a lot of boxes offering maximum versatility and durability for the consumer. We like to say a rubber stamp is for keeps.
 

There are other aspects of working with rubber that appealed to us from a production point of view. For example, a rubber stamp mould is re-useable over and over, we really liked that! We also liked that there are significant rubber recycling initiatives in operation, these are mainly pitched at recycling car tyres, as that is the most common rubber waste. But it is good there are established systems in place to create different products from all waste rubber: playground turf, rubberised asphalt, and all manner of floorings. If you are interested in understanding how rubber is a natural resource see this article and also, this one on how rubber is reused.'
 
Here at PaperArtsy, as we make everything on site, we have found increased efficiency in that we only need to manufacture what we need for orders. Most of our orders we ship out daily go to the shops we supply. Sure, of course we hold some stock, but generally we manufacture stencils and stamps to order. Infusions and paint we always have plenty in stock, and we bottle up a new batch when the shelf is almost empty. This means we waste less time, energy and product by meeting demand without unnecessary waste. And we do not end up with any 'end of line' stock unsold, as we only press what is required. We just don't have any excess or an oversupply of stock. It is astonishing how many manufacturers will dump stock because they over-ordered, and often they do this into a different territory to their home base. It's almost like they hope people won't notice. We are not outsourcing product, so we do not have any of those air miles, or oversupply issues to contend with, we try to be smart about all aspects of our on site production to be as efficient as we possibly can be."
 

Leandra continues.. "At PaperArtsy we are in control of all stages of production on site. The rubber is moulded under heat and pressure, in the stamp presses, it then gets trimmed (see above), then the cling-foam liner is peeled off the back and the stamps are arranged on the index sheet which has one side laminated. That means the index/packaging sheet is also a storage sheet for the stamps. The plastic bags are biodegradable, this is a new product that only became available to us in 2021, and we are thrilled to shift to this packaging. We find that many customers like to cut off the 'hanging strip' at the top of the bag, and use the bag itself as the 'pocket' to keep the stamps in, so it can double up as a storage solution too".


As Leandra mentioned, all the PaperArtsy products are produced on site. The infusions are blended, bottled and labelled by hand...


The stencils are cut by laser and packaged on site. There is a small amount of plastic waste in this process. All PaperArtsy waste is sorted into different types of plastic plus rubber, paper, card etc. Once sorted, it is taken to the local commercial recycling centre, where it is all weighed, and they are charged for disposal by weight. Another incentive to repurpose and minimise waste. It is important to PaperArtsy to engage with those local services to ensure waste is dealt with correctly within the local and regional commercial recycling ecosystem.
 
 
This is the wonderful Willy Wonka paint bottling machine, it is a bespoke machine made just for PaperArtsy. It drops the right amount of paint into each bottle. It was designed like this to minimise product waste.  Most commercial bottling options you can loose a lot of product in the clean up between colours, and disposing of those fluids is also something that needs planning and thought to ensure it is appropriate for the environment and your specific location. Be it town or country - you can't just dump paint into any water system! At PaperArtsy they developed a machine to get every drop in the bottles with very little waste.
 

The paint is labelled on site too. No all those caps are not screwed on by hand there is a machine that whizzes the lids on - much easier! They just drop the lids on then zap with the lid whizmo gadget to tighten them!


Unfortunately these infusions lids are a bit too small for the automatic whizzy-lid thing, so they are lovingly applied one by one! And the labels too,  as they are also a bit tiny for the automatic label machine! But these are the lengths team PaperArtsy will go to to make something a bit different and unique.

As far as packaging is concerned, PaperArtsy will re-purpose, reuse and recycle all the packaging that comes their way as much as is possible. In addition to the eco-friendly bags mentioned above, they wrap their products in reusable tissue paper and the free postcard that comes with it can be used as a postcard or as Kate Yetter shows you below, can also become part of your next piece of art.


The latest news is that PA HQ are looking at their outer bags (which have to be tamper proof / waterproof etc.) for a better option and are in the throes of getting small cardboard boxes produced to replace these bags. It's great that you can buy PaperArtsy projects knowing that the company are making decisions about production, packaging and disposal sensitively and with the environmental impact in mind.


So to the wider topic of Sustainability. Where do we begin? There's so much we can say on the topic? Starting with the super basic; nearly every single project I've made has used glue. Have you checked the contents of your bottles recently? Most white glue is non-toxic thankfully but have you ever tried making your own with natural ingredients? Here's 5 natural glue recipes in case you'd like a go (including a lickable envelope glue).


We all know about trying to reuse items we'd normally discard. The dangers of plastic bottles in the oceans is something that the United Nations wanted to highlight so they commissioned this structure made entirely out of plastic bottles.

There are various artists who create in order to start a conversation, some make thought provoking art, and others like Ruth Waldren do all 3; creating structures that are both beautiful and help solve environmental issues. This is definitely a case of sustainable crafting as the woven sculpture is designed to catch fog. Fog harvesting has the potential to provide a valuable source of water in arid mountainous coastal regions.

Queensland College of Art partnered with a neighbouring Flight Centre and produced artwork using the Flight Centre's recyclable waste. Using ordinary 'waste' items not thought of for art pieces can really become something spectacular.


This next project from Etsuko Noguchi uses an old cardboard box, that you'd never guess was so humble in its origin.

But is sustainable crafting simply using leftover items? That's not always practical is it. Surely it's to do with our mindset and decision making and to quote Maya Angelou 'Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better'.
How can we be more sustainable? Is it to do with making choices. What are we to look out for when deciding where to spend our hard earned cash. 

We're coming back to PaperArtsy - because it's lovely to hear about how the products that we know and love are some of the safest in the world.
Did you know that Smoothy Cardstock and the boxes used to ship orders are using paper made from approved managed forest papers and with vegetable dye inks (for the printing on the boxes). When they made Scrapbooking papers back in the day, vegetable inks were used on those too.That was a conscious choice.


If we move to everyone's favourite paint; Fresco Finish Chalk Acrylics, these are 'Low VOC' paints (Volatile Organic Compounds) so no nasty smells and headaches. 


As they are chalk paints they have a shorter drying time anyway but they're not extended artificially by adding more VOCs.  If having a longer (wet) open time is important to you (particularly if you're doing gel printing) you can use PaperArtsy's environmentally friendly Drying Retarder. Just one drip is all you need in a blob of paint.


Small steps like choosing cardstock can be part of the process of thinking more consciously. If you need something other than Smoothy, kraft cardstock is a good option. Miriam Grazier designed this lovely kraft trio with Sara Naumann stamps.


..and Florence Adams who had a ball with kraft card and sewing themed Hot Picks.

Lots of artists love junk journalling and there's so much to be admired by reusing packaging and everyday items. A recent project from Sara Naumann saw here creating a junk journal with serviettes, left over bits and adding in some resin for longevity.


Lucy Edmondson brought joy to her leftover wooden stamp mounts along with other upcycled treasures.


We can take being creatively sustainable in lots of areas of our lives. How about wrapping presents? You can even see a gift wrapped inspired by  the Japanese art of Furoshiki.


There are lots of tips about being environmentally sustainable in our creating. From how much water we use to turning our machines off after using them. From consuming less to reimagining our supplies a little more. 
Could we creatively think about reducing the waste we produce with creating. What do we do with leftover scraps- can we reuse them or transform them into something else?

If you've a box of papers, junk mail, envelopes and scraps of watercolour cardstock etc, why not try making your own paper? Here's a fabulous tutorial complete with a DIY for the mould and deckle frames.


Trying to be sustainable and environmentally conscious also requires some thinking about the issues. I enjoyed reading this article by The Little Castle On Mercury who has started me thinking about the way I'm both choosing to create and purchase.

Hopefully this introduction will begin a conversation. We would love to continue it on PaperArtsy People (our Facebook group for PaperArtsy fans). 

If you want to create along with us while we explore this topic, please share your makes on our social feeds so we can follow along. Instagram @paperartsy or why not join us and post in the PaperArtsy People Group on Facebook. Make sure you tag us in your contributions, we love to see what you get up to in your creative world!