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A good way to get kids or even adults involved in art in the community.
It's an indoor clay tree sculpture a couple feet in height (maybe for a theatre foyer, or a town hall), made by loads of different groups in the community, which changes its appearance with every season (the sculpture, not the community).
The leaves are made by one group and have little holes in them through which the slim branch endings are 'threaded', and are in place for summer. They are leaves from different sorts of trees, to represent diversity.
The buds are made by another group, and are affixed like the leaves, and are only in place for spring. For autumn, there are brown leaves. For winter there are none.
It's simple, but beautiful when put in place, and everyone who makes a leaf can put their initials on the back - that way, everyone can point out their own leaves to their families and friends.
This is my first idea on the site, so don't trash me too harshly.
Blumster's suggestion could get expensive.
http://www.cnn.com/.../armstrong.hair.ap/ [AbsintheWithoutLeave, Jun 06 2005]
Fake Plastic Trees
Fake_20Plastic_20Trees by calum, shameless self publicist. Could be incorporated with this idea, to produce a community physical and performance art piece. [calum, Jun 06 2005]
[link]
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I like it. Welcome to the Halfbakery! |
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///This is my first idea on the site, so don't trash me too harshly./// |
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Apparently the HB's reputation precedes it. |
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When I originally saw the title, I thought that this was some kind of way to meld different trees to each other such that it has a very long season (each part blooming in succesion if a capable gardener were put in charge.) |
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One more suggestion: The roots of the tree should be made out of the locks of hair of historical figures. Gross. |
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I like this! Children would learn it's ok to integrate and CREATE something with kids from other communities. |
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I hope they weren't all 'sympathy for newbie' votes, but even if they were, don't croissants taste so good? |
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//'sympathy for newbie' votes// that sounds like a whole new idea all in its self. |
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Try the taste of this fishbone then. |
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I'm good with this, a little similar to edit: [Calum]'s fake tree, will have to look it up. + |
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Great idea for a Primary School or similar. Sympathy for the newbie: "Please allow me to introduce myself....". |
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I love the taste of newbies in the morning. |
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(just another quote, [bookends] can take it, I know it) |
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Okay, now, I've been here for a while, but how the hell is a newbie supposed to know what WTAGIPBAN means? |
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Wasn't That A Great Idea Posted By A Newbie. It is a response to an assertion of some sort regarding newbies and their posts, and also a track of the refutation. Still a good idea, too!. |
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It's a Zen state, [bookends]. If you seek you shall not find it.
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Can the leaves be attached with little magnets? The magnets would attach to metal on the tree. The metal would be one pole of the core of an electromagnet. After some period of time, the electromagnets will be indivually activated (with first one polarity then the opposite) to drop the leaves. I have no idea why that appeals to me, but it does. |
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I like that [half]. Can I suggest that, rather than inverting the polarity, the power be gradually reduced making the leaves drop one by one. Biomimicry collaborative sculpture for amateurs. |
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In using electromagnets with ferrous cores and magnets on the leaves, I hoped the leaves would hold without using power. Power would be needed only to drop the leaves (I'm very cheap, er, efficiency minded). Essentially, it would push the leaves off as opposed to letting them go. |
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Admittedly, I've never tried this, but I assume it could work with the proper magnets and if the magnets don't flip around too quickly and grab the electromagnet again. |
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The two polarity hits were so that one of them would be opposite to the pole of the attached magnet thus repelling it and dropping the leaf (without any fancy polarity detection circuitry -- I'm lazy, er, efficency minded). |
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(I've slightly altered the previous annotation for clarity.) |
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