++++ 2/13/2024 ++++ Cardboard. It's about the easiest junk to acquire right now (although empty plastic liquid containers are up there, at least in my little slice of heaven). Cardboard. It's easy to cut. It takes to the cheapest of glues. Yes, use school glue on it [1]. It is very forgiving -- if you get a cut slightly off, you can usually either bend or smosh part of it to make it fit. This often looks charming and shows off the handmade quality of the piece. Cardboard. It is easy to write on, so it's easy to talk back to. A box from a company tells me to "recycle this"? Nice suggestion. But I'm going cross out "recycle" and write "reuse" and proceed to reuse it. Not everyone knows that "reduce, reuse, recycle" is a hierarchy. Reusing is better than recycling, and it would be better for the environment if we reduced the stuff. Maybe not so many deliveries to single households? Cardboard. It's the place were you can start the work of repairing the world. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ + Cardboard. + + It's Junk Punk on Easy Mode. + +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ This is a call to action. I want YOU to make things. A shower thought from last week was about seizing the means of production. "Seizing" has not seemed to historically build a better social order. But the kernel of truth is that the People should not forfeit the means of production, and the pendulum has swung far, far too far in that direction. So let's make stuff. At least customize something! It is time to talk back to the designs that want to be treated as givens. Cut two rectangles in a box so that you have handles. Or write on some of your things on your objects to show they are yours. Culture jam slogans on *your* things in *your* home, to show you are not theirs. Use cardboard to make the cutting board for your cardboard projects. If you put a layer of tape on top this can now serve as a board to paint things on or do glue ups. Heck, you could make one board for each operation. You could put a handle at the top of each and then hang them all -- together to save space, or separate for ease of access. You have choices, you have options. And the more you can make, the more choices and options you have. == [1] School glue is PVA, Polyvinyl Acetate, which is the same substance in "wood glue," which it usually dyed yellow here in the U.S. (but not everywhere). I don't know if the difference is concentration, or other additives, or what, so I won't make any claims about them being equivalent. But school glue is really strong when it has set properly, with pressure applied and enough time to dry. If you are wondering why papers fall off when glued together with children's projects, I would have to say it is the lack of pressure applied. You need clamps, friends. Or glue-up boards, or some other way to apply pressure in order to join two things together using glue.