Friday, June 14, 2019

"Garden Art & Decoration" (1973)

Another book donated to my BOOK's at the thrift store.

A Sunset Book: Garden Art & Decoration, 1973


"A hatful of succulents";  copper birds. . . "by metal arts hobbyist"

 Sculpture is easy ...with asbestos!

Cat reminds me of Art Sparker's mosaic cat, sadly still missing from her porch, having been stolen.

5 comments:

  1. Fun! But yeah...asbestos...I remember playing with that stuff as kids. It's a wonder our whole generation is still alive.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I look back at my organic chemistry class held in a 1920's building with vent hoods that were most likely undersized. I remember looking up during one of our night classes to see a haze in the room from the use of various chemicals for our experiments. Yes, a wonder some of us are still alive!

    I do love Sunset books-they always had the coolest things to make. I have ones on mosaics, preserving your own food, garden work centers, furniture upholstery and repair, weaving, and ceramics. During the 70's they published a Christmas ideas and answers full of ideas for parties, decorations, and gifts one could make.

    They still publish a magazine that focuses on the western US but i am sure that it is a ghost of the old issues.

    Kirsten

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yeah, no kidding! The stuff we've already survived!

    But I looked it up, and as you both know, life expectancy has risen a lot even in our lifetimes.
    In 1961, when I was born, it was about 70 years, now it's about 80.

    And worldwide:
    "No country in the world today has a lower life expectancy than the countries with the highest life expectancy in 1800."

    ReplyDelete
  4. P.S. I know I'm being pedantic--sorry--but there are
    interesting charts & info about world life expectancy over time here, if you're interested:
    https://ourworldindata.org/life-expectancy

    I was interested that life expectancy once you're old hasn't changed much--if you make it to 70, you're likely to make it into the 80s--but probably not a whole lot longer than that, statistically speaking.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Very moderne. I’ve been in houses along these lines, where it looks (in a wonderful way) as if people are still living in the 1960s and ’70s.

    Uses for boulders and pebbles: arrange in groups of three?

    ReplyDelete