Fri 15 Sep 2006
We have a stone floor in the kitchen; a very hard, very cold, stone floor. In the summer, when it’s hot, it’s fantastic but in the winter, it becomes a game how we can step on it the least (I’ve cooked dinner kneeling on a stool on more than one occasion).
As much as we dislike it then, there is one collective entity that hates it more: our crockery. One slip when we’re washing up and - smash! It has no chance really.
When saucers or shallow dishes break cleanly, into just a couple of pieces, we glue them back together to use under plant pots and handle-less mugs are collected in the under-sink cupboard to be used for “bits” - but are there any other ways we could re-use them? What about stuff that can’t be glued back together?
Or should we just bury them deep down in the soil for future archeologists to find and give them final proof that our society worshipped a God named “Microwave safe”?
(Photo by acerin)





bev
September 18th, 2006 at 3:17 pm
As long as they bits aren’t too sharp, broken crochery is great for putting at the bottom of plant pots for drainage.
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Cadan ap Tomos
September 18th, 2006 at 5:54 pm
Glue them back together. It usually works…
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dancing girl
September 19th, 2006 at 9:39 am
If you are into gardening I would smash them into smaller pieces and use them as a decorative mulch around pot plants. It looks so cute around my spring bulbs at the moment. Just like mosaic but without the hassle. Group the colours into complementary shades. I have also used many decorative shards in mosaic work. I have made myself a beautiful fruit bowl on the base of a terracotta plant pot. It is alot simpler than you think once you organise your pattern.
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Cadan ap Tomos
October 24th, 2006 at 11:34 am
Visit http://www.allfreecrafts.com/recycling-crafts/mosaic-flower-pot.shtml to make a mosaic flower pot…
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aware
January 17th, 2007 at 3:42 am
make a mosaic… anything. if you want more colors and textures, break more stuff!
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Crys
February 13th, 2007 at 9:42 am
My grandmother used to collect broken pieces of glass from the same situation and she put them in a jar with a lid. After a while, with different colors and what-not, you wind up with a decoration. Just make sure you don’t set it somewhere that it would fall and break all over again! :)
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How can I reuse or recycle … a broken glass? » How can I recycle this?
April 18th, 2007 at 11:10 am
[…] covered broken crockery before but I would worry about using the glass pieces in the bottom of a plantpot or around the […]
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J. James
August 5th, 2007 at 11:04 pm
Research is going into ways in which broken glass can be recovered, soon you may be able to stick that broken glass in the recycle bin!!
http://www.consrv.ca.gov/index/news/2004%20News%20Releases/NR2004-10_Market_Development_Recycling_Grants.htm
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How can I reuse or recycle … mugs with broken handles? » How can I recycle this?
August 6th, 2007 at 11:13 am
[…] I mentioned before when talking about broken crockery in general, we have a very hard, very cold stone floor in the kitchen. Things tend to smash, or at least […]
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James
March 4th, 2008 at 3:49 pm
I use my broken plates and what-not as decor for the bottom of my fish bowls. It look likes ruins of Atlantis!
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artsiecl
March 4th, 2008 at 10:29 pm
How about making stepping stones for the garden and using small pieces at random in them for a real art look ….and for fun…..
carol
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