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zer0gee
Cartographer
Level 7: 2970 points
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Last Logged In: April 26th, 2025
TEAM: The Disorganised Guerilla War On Boredom and Normality TEAM: CGØ TEAM: Run-of-the-mill taskers TEAM: The Ultimate Collaboration Team TEAM: Team FOEcakes TEAM: Probot TEAM: Public Library Zero TEAM: INFØ TEAM: New Orleans Zero BART Psychogeographical Association Rank 3: Cartographer EquivalenZ Rank 1: User The University of Aesthematics Rank 2: Dealer Humanitarian Crisis Rank 2: Justice Biome Rank 1: Hiker Chrononautic Exxon Rank 1: Clockwatcher Society For Nihilistic Intent And Disruptive Efforts Rank 3: The Meddlesome




30 + 86 points

From Scratch by zer0gee

December 6th, 2008 6:12 PM

INSTRUCTIONS: Go to a hardware store. Purchase no more than $10 (US$) worth of materials. Build something very unusual yet useful. Use it.

(currency exchange rates can be found here)

In 1996 or so, I worked for a large art and craft supply store. Sometimes product representatives would come in and demonstrate how their stuff was supposed to be used. I sat in on a paper-making demo, but I never actually made any paper. I knew how to do it in theory, but not in practice. For this task, I drew on this twelve-year-old memory to build a paper-making deckle frame and use it to make paper.

I went to my neighborhood Ace hardware store to purchase my less-than-$10 worth of materials to build the deckle. I got a redwood plant stake to cut up for the frame, a piece of window screening, and a hacksaw (Molotov's been "borrowing" my old hacksaw for about a year now). I built a 10" square frame - measured the wood, cut it, and stapled the ends together. I cut a piece of screening to fit the frame and tacked it in. Deckles are not complicated in themselves, and I remembered pretty well how to make one - it was the paper making part that was going to be iffy.

I started with some newspaper that had been destined for the recycle bin. It's easier to use really fibrous, porous paper than other kinds, especially since I was going to do this all by hand - if you have a blender to mash stuff in (which I don't), you can use pretty much whatever paper you want to start with. You can even experiment with raw fibers. That's much more difficult, though, and this is a nice way to recycle old paper. I tore up the newspaper into the smallest pieces I could, and let them soak for about half an hour in hot water. Then I mashed them up with my fingers, which turned my hands a lovely shade of newsprint black. After I got a pulp that was about the texture of oatmeal, I poured it into the deckle. I didn't make enough to fill the whole thing, but I didn't need that much for the project I had in mind, so that was okay. If you can blend a thinner pulp, you'll get a finer-textured paper, but I wanted it to be pretty thick. I spread the pulp out over the deckle screen and let it sit for about fifteen minutes to drain. When I was fairly sure it would hold together, I turned the mess out onto some paper towels, pressed the excess water out of it, and left it to dry.

I decided to experiment with the drying process, since I'm impatient and it takes a long time for the newly-made paper to dry, especially at this thickness. I tried putting it in the microwave, which worked fabulously! I got a wonderfully textured, irregularly-shaped piece of paper, which I used to make a card. I will use the scraps for my mail art. The paper is lightweight for being so thick, a great mottled gray color, and you can still see some of the newspaper words in it.

I am so surprised I actually remembered how to do all of this! For never having done it before, I feel very accomplished, and will be making more paper in the near future.

- smaller

here it is!

here it is!


supplies

supplies

window screening - $1.19, redwood plant stake - $2.49, hacksaw - $3.99, tax - .77 = $8.44


receipt

receipt


measuring

measuring


Woofie supervises, as usual

Woofie supervises, as usual


drawing cut lines

drawing cut lines


sawing

sawing

the wood smelled really, really good


frame pieces

frame pieces


stapling the frame

stapling the frame


framed

framed


ruining my scissors

ruining my scissors


tacking on the screen

tacking on the screen


trimming edges

trimming edges


finished deckle

finished deckle


tearing newspaper

tearing newspaper


hot water

hot water


soaking

soaking


mushing up newspaper

mushing up newspaper


eew!

eew!


newsprint hands

newsprint hands


bowl of pulp

bowl of pulp


ready to make some paper

ready to make some paper


pan for pouring

pan for pouring


pouring

pouring


pulp in deckle

pulp in deckle


plop!

plop!


drying

drying


wow! paper!

wow!  paper!


one side

one side


other side

other side


in paper cutter

in paper cutter


love letter

love letter


finished

finished



24 vote(s)



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7 comment(s)

(no subject)
posted by Morte on December 6th, 2008 6:38 PM

Cool, I was just telling myself I needed to remember how to make paper and lo, there you is with this task.

(no subject)
posted by susy derkins on December 6th, 2008 8:04 PM

I am struggling with the very unusual part. But maybe is all about the cultural context?

(no subject)
posted by Scooter Vagabond on December 6th, 2008 10:45 PM

Where have you been Susy? It's all about the email now. Paper is out. Bits and Bytes are in.

Newspaper is a dying media; a device which reuses old paper is out of the loop twice. ~Waldo +3
posted by Waldo Cheerio on December 7th, 2008 3:14 AM

If you walked into a new acquaintance's house, and they had a deckle frame, I expect you would find that fairly unusual. I had to scroll back up to remember what to even call the thing. Beyond inventing a new use or process for a device, anything useful, cheap, and unusual is probably going to be an outmoded technology, and paper-making is about as unusual a utility as I can imagine in a household nowadays.

you see, newspaper is a staple in piñata countries +1
posted by susy derkins on December 7th, 2008 12:07 PM

Which is maybe why there are recycled paper workshops at every children's museum, summer camp, after-school program... My uncle used to make his own paper from boiled shredded rags and twigs and then print photographs on it. And it wasn't really strange.
I want to think cultural, and not "everything that I do not personally do every day is very unusual".

(no subject)
posted by rongo rongo on December 8th, 2008 1:25 PM

Seemed unusual to me...I'm reasonably arts & craftsy, but I've only seen paper making once, at an origami display where they showed a video of how they had to make their own special 6ft by 6ft thin paper.

(no subject)
posted by Kassitastrophe on March 5th, 2009 3:19 AM

I gave you extra points for Wolfie