Back in the day when John used to buy me flowers*, if possible, I would keep and dry the flowers to preserve the gift.
I’ve ended up with quite a stash of dried flowers hanging from various parts of the kitchen because I couldn’t think what to do with them once they were dried.
They are not flowers grown intending to be dried so they don’t hold their petals enough to be used in a dried flower arrangement – and I’m not really a dried flower arrangement girl anyway. I’m not really a pot pourri fan either – the cats would just try to eat it. Or poo in it.
So any non-flower-arrangement, non-pot-pourri-in-bowls reuses for dried flowers? It seems a shame to just compost them after all this time but they’re just getting knocked about in their current position.
* This isn’t a dig at him: he doesn’t buy me flowers now because I made him stop for environmental reasons. We have lots of (home-grown) plants around the house instead now.
(Photo by Christopher Rayan/StockXpert)
Categories: garden, household, items, Valentines
Posted by louisa
on 20 October 2006
With the mass move to digital cameras these days, the old cameras have become as obsolete as the film canisters.
Nicola Dickinson has emailed us on this very subject – how can the cameras themselves be recycled? Or, I guess, reused?
A lot of old electronics (like phones and computers) are collected for charity and shipped overseas but I don’t know if this would be happening with cameras too because they don’t seem as “essential” (inverted commas because the others aren’t really essential in most situations) and they’re useless without the film and developing infrastructure etc.
So any ideas on how they can avoid being landfill?
(Photo by AAD)
Categories: hobbies, household, items
Posted by louisa
on 18 October 2006
…And moving on from old paint, what about old nail varnish?
From the days when I actually used it, I’ve got quite a few half-bottles left over in all sorts of colours. Some of them have separated but recongeal with a quick shake, but I’ve only painted my nails once this year and can’t see myself doing it again in a hurry (for both aesthetic reasons and for the sake of my nails) so they’re pretty much redundant.
So what can I do with all the leftover nail polish? And what about the bottles with their little brushes – any reuses for those?
(Photo by tijmen)
Categories: bathroom, items
Posted by louisa
on 16 October 2006
Posting the paint tins entry last week made me wonder what about paint itself.
I know there are a lot of worthwhile causes out there that collect the half-cans of paint sat around in everyone’s cellar/shed/store-cupboard and put them to good uses – like painting murals, bit of furniture or when there is enough left, decorating interiors of community projects and the like.
These things tend to be local but does anyone know of any national schemes? If not, how about local ones in your area? If you do, leave the details in a comment – including which area it is if it’s a local one.
And aside from that, any crafty craft-y reuse ideas for old emulsion/gloss paint?
Categories: household, items
Posted by louisa
on 13 October 2006
A few years ago, I bought a box of supermarket value cling film (aka plastic wrap, saran wrap, cellophane) but in the process of making it value, the producers seem to have left out the cling.
I don’t use it much anyway (more of a fan of re-usable tubs) but whenever I do use it, it’s absolutely infuriating because it doesn’t stick to the bowl/pan in question, or to itself, thereby rendering itself utterly pointless as a thorough covering. Grrr.
So any suggestions on what I can use it – essentially just very thin plastic sheeting – for instead?
(Photo by Ilmari Karonen, c/o Wikipedia)
Categories: items, kitchen
Posted by louisa
on 11 October 2006