Posts Tagged ‘anonymous’

moss graffiti

Awhile back we had been talking about yarn bombing in class (Pam made an excellent post on it) and I started to look into other unique and alternative ways one might make their mark in their landscape. I came across moss graffiti.

“This simple, yet effective concoction is an old favourite of gardeners trying to encourage moss growth and provides an excellent alternative to spray paint.”

You can create your own, slow growing, natural (organic) and impermanent murals, typography, or graffiti anywhere!

Find a suitable damp and shady wall on to which you can apply your moss recipe (I’ll provide that, via mossgraffiti). Paint your art or design onto the wall by hand or using a stencil. Eventually, as long as the conditions are good and damp, moss should form and grow into a whole rooted plant – maintaining your chosen design before eventually colonizing the whole area.

Here is the Recipe:

  • 1 can of beer
  • 1/2 teaspoon of sugar
  • several clumps of garden moss
  • You will need a plastic container with a lid, a blender and a paintbrush.

Now that you have the recipe, you are free to go out into the world and create green, living graffiti!

I find the ways in which people personalize the urban world around them fascinating – especially when it is in such a unique way! I was familiar with guerrilla gardening, but this is completely new and exciting to me! I might just go make my mark on the world this weekend!

hugging walls

I was struggling with the idea of interactive and wearables today, and what I could possibly make for my final project. Wearables always make me think of textiles, which made me think: what if I made something interactive using textiles? Maybe its not something you physically wear, but rather something made from (or incorporating) textiles. What if I used technology with the textiles that encompass my sleeping environment? Or what if I used technology of some sort with upholstery fabrics for interactive seating….the possibilities are endless!!

Here is an example of a different take on the idea of “interactive” using textiles:This is the anonymous hugging wall from Keetra Dean Dixon. There are two arms sewn in into the wall, so that you can either be the hugger, or the hug-ee, depending on what side you stand, or what mood you’re in.

I like the annonymous way of connecting with people, and I love the spin on “interaction” and the use of textiles. If walls can “come alive” and give out hugs, in what other ways can we engage with our environment? And what if all normally hard, rigid surfaces (like walls) were suddenly made of fabric and textiles? Wouldn’t that be interesting….