Sunday 30 August 2020

Wildflower Lawn

Do you know what lawns are for? They're for rich people to show off how much land they have and don't need. 

Well, that's not much good for our house. We're environmentalists. Aside from growing our own food, we want to use our land for growing plants for insects. So, way back in March, The Artivist and I started work on turning our front lawn into a wildflower meadow. 

We dug it up. Not completely, we just wanted to remove some of the grass and dandelion roots to make room for our new flowers to put down their own roots. 


We had these Beebombs that we'd been given for Christmas, so we scattered some about, along with some other seeds and we waited. Over the next few weeks, we saw a few pieces of bee bomb taken away by crows. We didn't see much sign of any flowers. 

We tried some more Beebombs, this time germinating them in water and then placing the seedlings carefully on the lawn. Still after a few weeks they hadn't taken. 

We learned from our friend The Allotmenter that many wildflowers don't do too well in nutrient rich soil. There's a flower called yellow rattle that drains soil of nutrients and it's useful to plant alongside other wildflowers for this reason. There are yellow rattle seeds in the bee bombs, so we hoped that if they came through, the other flowers would follow. 

Eventually, in early June, we saw a few yellow rattle flowers pop up on our lawn. 

And, sure enough, we soon started to see some other flowers coming through too. Vetch, buttercups, chamomile.


Later we saw nasturtiums, poppies and cornflowers.


It's not quite the full wildflower meadow I'd had in mind... yet. But it's coming along nicely, the bees and butterflies seem pretty keen on it already and I think next spring we can expect a nice array of flowers to bloom all of their own accord. 

Thursday 20 August 2020

Making a Nursery

Helloo, lovely readers. Long time no posting... sorry about that. There's so much to catch you up on, I'm mostly not even gonna bother.

I have a new partner. He's a writer, performer and activist. An artivist, if you will. And he's not really all that new. We have a baby together, and we've been painting his bedroom. We went with a classical elements theme - earth, air, fire and water, one element on each wall. Since we're in lockdown, we've been taking turns to play with The Youngling while the other paints.

We started last Monday, painting the gloss first. Always do the gloss first (if you later spill emulsion on gloss paint, you can just wipe it off with a wet cloth). We had some leftover from another room. It's called light rain. When we pulled back the carpet to paint the skirting board we found a laminate floor underneath which the previous owners had spilled emulsion paint on, so maybe we'll be able to clean it up. That would be good because the carpet needs throwing away really. 

On Tuesday, we worked on cutting out stencils. We printed some pictures and I used my craft knife to cut them out. 
 


On Wednesday we painted the ceiling like a sky. It was already white; we painted it blue, leaving out some cloud shapes. The Artivist has dyspraxia, which can make things like painting pictures on ceilings a bit difficult, so I painted the outline of the clouds and the perimeter of the ceiling, then The Artivist filled it in.

 


On Thursday, I painted the fire wall (to protect us from viruses). I wanted to make it fade from yellow in the middle of the wall through orange to red at the edges. I mixed my red and yellow paints together in a few different ratios but they came out more pink than orange. I suppose my yellow wasn't vibrant enough (I wanted a sunshine shade but they only had one called Banana Spilt). So The Artivist ran to B&Q and got some fiery orange paint, and I got painting. 

First I did the red edges, the yellow centre, and an orange ring in between. Then I poured some orange paint into a bucket and started working my way outwards from the orange to the red, occasionally adding red paint into the bucket to create this gradient effect. Then, starting with a new bucket and adding yellow paint this time, I worked inwards from the orange circle to the yellow centre. 


While we had the orange and yellow paints out, I painted a sun around the light fitting. 



On Friday, The Artivist painted the Water wall. We poured a few shades of blue and green, plus some white into an old washing up bowl. We barely mixed the paints because he wanted to create a multicoloured effect, which is pretty easily achieved by dipping the brush in a different place within the bowl for each stroke. The end result is fantastic. I love his waves. 



On Saturday, The Artivist painted the Earth wall green. Then he painted a tree on it. He was a bit nervous of getting it wrong at first, and not long after he'd started felt it didn't look right, but as he added branches he gained more confidence. He even worked up the courage to layer in a few more shades for a textured bark effect, and thought he'd ruined it but I think it looks great and after a little break he came back to it and began to agree. Later, we added some tufts of grass and flowers. 



I painted the Air wall a greenish-bluish-grey named Tranquil Dawn, then I painted a tornado. 



There's going to be a dragon on the fire wall so on Sunday I painted its breath. I made a bit of a mess of it at first (I think I was going for a flame at first, which is silly because dragons aren't candles) but I managed to save it. 



There's going to be a family of ducks on the water wall, so I painted a rock for them to stand on. 

 


I mixed some shades of green paint and dabbed them onto the tree to create an impression of leaves. 



This Monday was stencilling day. We stenciled some perching birds onto the tree using my homemade stencils, and some leaves using some stencils The Artivist bought online



We stenciled flying birds onto the air wall. One bird's feet didn't come out well so I touched it up by hand. 

  


We stencilled the dragon onto the fire wall. I had cut a stencil for a Phoenix too, but didn't really trust it (too flimsy) so I used it to draw a Phoenix on the wall in pencil, and I painted it by hand. 



We stencilled fish onto the water wall. They didn't turn out too well at first because my homemade stencils are made of cheap paper and aren't that good, but we gave them outlines with sharpies and now they look great. 

And we stenciled a family of ducks (I left their feet out of the stencil and added them by hand). And a couple of flying ducks.



On Tuesday we tidied up, putting away all our paints and cleaning our dozens and dozens of brushes. 

On Wednesday we spent an entire day scrubbing the surprise laminate floor, and it came clean and is usable.

On Thursday we put up the curtains, lampshade (remember this?), a nightlight and some pictures. We've bought a new rug, which really ties the room together be having colours from every wall. We put paper leaves on the tree, which have messages from our friends and family.



It's been a busy two weeks and we're really really pleased with the results. The room looks brilliant, and The Youngling is mesmerised by our artwork. Hopefully it won't be too exciting for him to sleep in.