Showing posts with label crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crafts. Show all posts

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Dying Wool with Koolaid

Gaea has discoverd a safe, non-toxic dye for wool.

K O O L A I D !


Yes, there is so much more! Instructions and photographs of her delightful craft.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Craftsmanship

CRAFTSMANSHIP is not an academic subject, and no craft can be mastered by learning about it from a book. It is empirical knowledge that counts in producing a skilled craftsman, since a craft is a practical matter. Long hours of work at the bench are necessary, repeating operation after operation, before the eye can be trained, the hand made skillful, and the mind, eye, and hand coordinated.

It is axiomatic that a practical performance or demonstration of how to do a thing is more vivid than a mere verbal explanation of how a thing should be done. And when a demonstration is not possible, I think the next best way of learning to perform a manual task is to have before one a picture or graph which illustrates the process contemplated, since most people are visual-minded.

Edith Diehl 1876-1953

Ms. Diehl studied with Jules Domont in Paris; with Louis Jacobs and J. De Buyl in Brussels, and eventually established her own book-bindery in New York City. When Columbia University established bookbinding classes in 1934, she was among the first instructors.


Bookbinding: Its Background and Technique

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Colored Chicks

I've heard of dyed in the wool, but dyed in the egg?


The orignal purpose for coloring chick embryos was to provide a practical method of identifying chicks from different groupings so as to watch their movements after they left the clutch. The dye will be on their birth down, and only lasts a few weeks until their true feathers grow in.

Equipment Needed

Sterile towels
Sterile Distilled Water
1 syringe , sterile
1 No. 20 gauge needle, sterile
1 No. 3 dental drill or dremel drill, sterile
Betadine
Paraffin Wax
Sterile Gloves
Food coloring, sterilized by bringing to boil for 20 minutes and then cooled
White Leghorn Fertile Eggs (16 days incubated) White chicks show color much better than yellow.


Procedure

1. Wipe all eggs with betadine, and let dry.
2. Assemble Equipment on a sterile towel. Then don sterile gloves. Once you have put on your gloves DO NOT touch ANYTHING but the prepared eggs and the sterile items you are using.
3. At a spot about ½ inch from the small end of the egg, dab an area about 1 inch in diameter with betadine, again. Dip the tip of the dental drill in betadine. Rotate the drill between your fingers while gently pressing the tip against the shell in the center of the daubed area. Rotate only until you make a hole in the shell.
4. Assemble the syringe and needle. Be sure they do not become contaminated by contact with foreign objects. Dip the needle in the betadine, and withdraw 0.5 cc of dye.
5. Insert only the tip of the needle in the hole and through the shell membranes. To prevent overflow, gently and slowly inject the dye.
6. Remove the needle, seal the hole with paraffin, and return the egg to the incubator.
7. Clean the syringe and needle by flushing them with sterile distilled water EVERY TIME you inject a new egg.

And there's more!

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Artistic Trading Cards

(aka) ATCs are the up and coming fad amongst the matronly set. They're collecting them and sharing them like the old bubblegum cards.



Here's more!