the blog

natural resources #1

Conservationists are Sexy No Comments

Check the quality of your tap water at home. You can get water testing kits from the hardware store. If the drinking water in your area does not meet with your standards (that means odor, too, because if it doesn’t smell good either you won’t drink it) use water filters. Water filters can be mounted right onto the faucet, under the sink, or to a pitcher (such as Brita®). Initially the cost can run from $20 to over a $150, plus your time for installation but you’ll make up for the expense and the cost to our environment in no time.

food #2

Conservationists are Sexy No Comments

Beans, beans, a healthy meal; the more you eat, the faster earth heals. Besides having more fiber and no cholesterol, beans are more versatile and keep much longer and safer than beef. Working parents can make a 15 bean stoup Sunday night for dinner and have a few lunches and plenty of left over for hectic nights.

In a really large pot, saute one chopped yellow onion, 3 chopped carrots, 2 chopped stalks of celery, Click to Continue »

electronic waste #2

Conservationists are Sexy No Comments

Gone are the days of the bluish grey flourescent light bulbs that flicker and buzz. Today’s flourescent lights are not only cheaper (lasting 5 to 10 times longer than incandescent lights) but are a more efficient use of energy. They are brighter and no longer cast that grey depressing light. Compact fluorescent bulbs need to be recycled so just remember to read the instructions on how and where.

paper free #3

Conservationists are Sexy No Comments

Use cloth napkins and linens at mealtime. It saves thousands of sheets of paper per family each year. After a few meals throw them in the regular wash and you’ll never feel the difference doing the laundry and you won’t detect it in your water bill.

watercolor 101

Photoshop Techniques No Comments

OUT OF CONTROL

Dare I say, “Water color is magical”? As a child you start with crayons, then pencils and then paint. Mommy puts a plastic pail of water next to your tempura set and you douse the brush, the paper and the apron with water. Colors run unevenly all over and you smear it and mix it until the paper is a muddy greyish-brown. Didn’t it make you feel like you were creating? Nothing was more instantly gratifying for a budding artist. Click to Continue »