Magnet science.
Show & Tell
Noah Kahan
No title available
ojovivo

Product Placement
Monterey Bay Aquarium
YOU ARE THE REASON
official daine visual archive
Game of Thrones Daily
DEAR READER
Jules of Nature
RMH
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Sade Olutola
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

oozey mess

⁂
tumblr dot com

Janaina Medeiros
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@educatingrue
Magnet science.
Comic work shop at Chethams Library today.
When I grow up I hope to become a poop emoji. Because I am Modern. We fished the Big Life Journal yesterday.
I bought Make A Word by Ed Emeberly on someone's recommendation. Rue gas been saying he wanted to improve his drawings for a good while. He naturally draws very angular and I thought it might be best to try to not stray to far from his natural style at first. Maybe we could move on to other styles once he's embraced the step by step nature of manuals. He was really enjoying drawing thus evening.
Harvard has a pigment library that stores old pigment sources, like the ground shells of now-extinct insects, poisonous metals, and wrappings from Egyptian mummies, to preserve the origins of the world’s rarest colors.
A few centuries ago, finding a specific color might have meant trekking across the globe to a mineral deposit in the middle of Afghanistan. “Every pigment has its own story,” Narayan Khandekar, the caretaker of the pigment collection, told Fastcodesign. He also shared the stories of some of the most interesting pigments in the collection.
Mummy Brown
“People would harvest mummies from Egypt and then extract the brown resin material that was on the wrappings around the bodies and turn that into a pigment. It’s a very bizarre kind of pigment, I’ve got to say, but it was very popular in the 18th and 19th centuries.”
Cadmium Yellow
“Cadmium yellow was introduced in the mid 19th century. It’s a bright yellow that many impressionists used. Cadmium is a heavy metal, very toxic. In the early 20th century, cadmium red was introduced. You find these pigments used in industrial processes. Up until the 1970s, Lego bricks had cadmium pigment in them.”
Annatto “The lipstick plant—a small tree, Bixa orellana, native to Central and South America—produces annatto, a natural orange dye. Seeds from the plant are contained in a pod surrounded with a bright red pulp. Currently, annatto is used to color butter, cheese, and cosmetics.”
Lapis Lazuli “People would mine it in Afghanistan, ship it across Europe, and it was more expensive than gold so it would have its own budget line on a commission.”
Dragon’s Blood “It has a great name, but it’s not from dragons. [The bright red pigment] is from the rattan palm.”
Cochineal “This red dye comes from squashed beetles, and it’s used in cosmetics and food.”
Emerald Green “This is made from copper acetoarsenite. We had a Van Gogh with a bright green background that was identified as emerald green. Pigments used for artists’ purposes can find their way into use in other areas as well. Emerald green was used as an insecticide, and you often see it on older wood that would be put into the ground, like railroad ties.”
Source
This is pure alchemy. I love it!
If you know how much I love colors you know how much I’m freaking out right now. I WANT TO BE THERE
Harvard has a pigment library that stores old pigment sources, like the ground shells of now-extinct insects, poisonous metals, and wrappings from Egyptian mummies, to preserve the origins of the world’s rarest colors.
A few centuries ago, finding a specific color might have meant trekking across the globe to a mineral deposit in the middle of Afghanistan. “Every pigment has its own story,” Narayan Khandekar, the caretaker of the pigment collection, told Fastcodesign. He also shared the stories of some of the most interesting pigments in the collection.
Mummy Brown
“People would harvest mummies from Egypt and then extract the brown resin material that was on the wrappings around the bodies and turn that into a pigment. It’s a very bizarre kind of pigment, I’ve got to say, but it was very popular in the 18th and 19th centuries.”
Cadmium Yellow
“Cadmium yellow was introduced in the mid 19th century. It’s a bright yellow that many impressionists used. Cadmium is a heavy metal, very toxic. In the early 20th century, cadmium red was introduced. You find these pigments used in industrial processes. Up until the 1970s, Lego bricks had cadmium pigment in them.”
Annatto “The lipstick plant—a small tree, Bixa orellana, native to Central and South America—produces annatto, a natural orange dye. Seeds from the plant are contained in a pod surrounded with a bright red pulp. Currently, annatto is used to color butter, cheese, and cosmetics.”
Lapis Lazuli “People would mine it in Afghanistan, ship it across Europe, and it was more expensive than gold so it would have its own budget line on a commission.”
Dragon’s Blood “It has a great name, but it’s not from dragons. [The bright red pigment] is from the rattan palm.”
Cochineal “This red dye comes from squashed beetles, and it’s used in cosmetics and food.”
Emerald Green “This is made from copper acetoarsenite. We had a Van Gogh with a bright green background that was identified as emerald green. Pigments used for artists’ purposes can find their way into use in other areas as well. Emerald green was used as an insecticide, and you often see it on older wood that would be put into the ground, like railroad ties.”
Source
This is pure alchemy. I love it!
If you know how much I love colors you know how much I’m freaking out right now. I WANT TO BE THERE
The boy is doing an online comic book making class. We managed to do a page today. It was hard and I deffo fell out with him. He will say or do anything to get out of writing. I get that he finds it hard but it's never gonna get easier without practice. He dragged every minute into hours. But once we finished the page, he realized he'd really done quite a lot and achieved our days goal. He was smiling and proud, I know these are all things we have to work on but honestly I think we made some small progress today.
Clayton Vale and dream catchers.
Rueben has been doing a class in comic book making class. We've been working on his Potato Man comic a bit today.
Rueben built an airfix model this morning with next to no help from me.
Unschooling in action. Rues study notes on how to craft a mechanical eye in Terreria.
We have a flat luke visiting us. He came to wood school and Library today.
Things I’ve realised about homeschooling
I started homeschooling about a month ago, and I’ve noticed some things that are neat about it. I learn mostly out of library, and old school textbooks because the nbn isn’t in our area yet.
1. You are the student best in your class/school (this only applies to only children)
2. Going anywhere counts as school. I’m not going to the grocery store, I’m “learning” about consumerism.
3. You get to chill with your pet(s) all day
4. No school uniform, I could do school in my comic con costume if I wanted
5. I can sleep in for once (even though my cat won’t let me)
6. I can write a novel as school work, instead of having to do so in my free time
7. Minecraft counts as IT
8. I can go to sovereign hill just to get raspberry drops and still count it as education
9. Unlimited coffee in class
10. I have an excuse to go to Officeworks and Bunnings all the time (I love office supply and tradie stores)
11. Unlimited food in class
12. I don’t have to eat my food in five minutes
13. No homework
14. No studying for exams
15. EVERYTHING COUNTS AS SCHOOL!!!
Friday involved returning a dinasaur, mud and loosing shoes. ( in more ways than one.)
Outschool Harry Potter Herbology for Muggles.
Miracle Fruit Tablets. They do work.