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.
Fun! But yeah...asbestos...I remember playing with that stuff as kids. It's a wonder our whole generation is still alive.
ReplyDeleteI 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!
ReplyDeleteI 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
Yeah, no kidding! The stuff we've already survived!
ReplyDeleteBut 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."
P.S. I know I'm being pedantic--sorry--but there are
ReplyDeleteinteresting 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.
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.
ReplyDeleteUses for boulders and pebbles: arrange in groups of three?