I think I won't make one of these.
http://www.tamponcrafts.com/snowflake.html
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I think I won't make one of these.
http://www.tamponcrafts.com/snowflake.html
This looks a lot more fun . . . .
http://www.tamponcrafts.com/gun.html
Words fail me....
Oof, I want that gun.
My sons used to dig out the tampons on occasion and make them launch like rockets.
What do you expect? They asked me what they were and I said, "Rockets" and showed them how. lol.
Karen
C'mon, the Halloween ghost is pretty cute!! :p
For that impossible to buy for person. The one who is never satisfied with any gift that they get.
Also a fantastic gift for a white elephant office party :D
I hope I NEVER find one of ANY of the fine items on this site under the tree for for me!!
I love it all but I'm sure that surprises no one.
OK... thank you???
Did I need to see this site? Probably not...
Will I show it/send it to others? Almost definately!
:p
Wow!
my dh cringed when i told him about it. I had to put in they are not used!
Hmmm, I'm not so sure. Blech. :eek: :p
I know. Those are disgusting, aren't they?
But the blow gun. That's just hilarious.
What.... is a white elephant office party?
A white elephant party is a party where you bring useless gifts for others and bring home a useless gift for yourself. I have done them at an office party and at church parties.
We generally play a game with the gifts - all of them are put in the center of the room. When it is your turn to pick a gift, you may take someone else's gift or one from the center of the room. The person who picks first gets the last opportunity to steal a gift. Gifts may only be stolen twice. At the end, we all take turn unwrapping our gifts.
It is a blast. On year a got a branch with an old shot gun shell glued to it - it was a "cartridge in a bare tree" - a play on the song "Five Golden Rings" - a partridge in a pear tree.
We have given horrendous stuff - a green crocheted womens dress, a do it yourself bubble bath kit (a jar of beans) and other fun and crazy stuff. It is just an excuse to get together, eat good food, and laugh.
White elephant gifts don't have to be gag gifts, either, just stuff you don't want.
Make sense?
One year I had my annual around the holidays and the office crew had decorated speculums into reindeer. They were actually very cute.:)
I liked the ghost the best.
Re: the gun-one summer evening a few years ago, our family and our neighbors made similarly shaped marshmallow blow guns out of pvc pipe. We decorated them with stickers for personalization. Some made "pistols", others made very long barreled "rifles".
I then got quart size zipper freezer bags and put twine on them so they could be slung over the shoulder and filled each bag with miniature marshmallows.
After our "guns" were assembled, the ammo loaded and we had practiced exhaling rather than inhaling through the blow guns (inhaling a marshmallow is NOT good), we walked through our neighborhood "shooting" people (lots of people were outside), interspersed with intergroup battles.
Days later, one could still see the remains of our activity in the road, a "Hansel and Gretel" path of marshmallows.
It was REALLY fun!
Have you seen the one where they make slippers out of maxi pads with wings? The story goes about a girl who can't afford gifts for her friends at christmas and she makes these for them.
http://familycrafts.about.com/librar...adslippers.htm
:rolleyes: :p ;) Jenn
I used to live in NYC and read ARTnews magazine and other artsy publications to keep on top of the contemporary art gallery scene. Of course there was much competition to produce exciting new work that might get you noticed during the art boom back then.
I remember about 20 years ago I read a feature article on a woman artist in NYC who had a show in a respected gallery. Her show consisted of her own saved used feminine pads, each one titled and preciously framed in a plexiglass box and hung on the wall. The names were inspired by the various interesting patterns of menstrual blood, sort of like the old ink blot tests. There were pads named things like "leaping rabbit", "sacrifice", or "lost in red canyon" etc. They looked like museum artifacts.
At first I was so grossed out. But after thinking about her "painting" her cotton canvases with her own female body, and giving value to something from our bodies that was usually shunned, hidden, and discarded, it began to make sense and I could appreciate it on a different level.
I know, weird story....but certainly this thread made me remember it. I wonder what that artist is doing now? Wish I could remember her name.
Nowadays there are lots of women artists using menstrual blood as a painting medium, etc,...but as I recall this woman was one of the first long ago, and it was quite shocking to the public back then.
The online Museum of Menstruation (MUM) is always fascinating place to wander about:
http://www.mum.org/index.html
I am thinking that bodily functions aren't art, no matter how nice the frame. What's next, soiled diapers?
Not sold, not at all.
Ick!
I must say Lisa is one of the only people I *know* who could make such an exhibit sound profound, beautiful and worthy. I am still pretty much grossed out though.
My husband and I have a group of mostly guy friends from college we still get together with once a year for a christmas party. The annual gift exchange is sometimes vulgar, always hilarious. We have decided to make the tampon shooter as our gift. :p
I'll take that as a compliment, thanks! :)
I too was rather grossed out by the feminine pad exhibition- yet I was also intrigued by it's idea and message and overall I don't mind getting a bit grossed out if it results in my being able to consider things in new ways that challenge my entrenched perceptions.
Like good literature, music, film, and poetry, visual art comes in many forms- it can be beautiful, thought provoking, disturbing, uplifting, spiritual, angry, funny, serene, shocking, heartwarming, grief-stricken, or combinations of those and other things. Distilled to its simplest equation, it makes us feel and makes us think, one way or another. :)
Lisa, A few years ago, I saw in a magazine an art exhibit in NY that showed "period panties" as art. Women saved their yucky drawers for art, similiar to the one you saw. I wouldn't air my dirty laundry though, but you're right, that artist thought "outside the box" on that one. Jenn
Oh, those naughty urban guerilla girls! :rolleyes: :cool: :D
Though I must say, once this kind of exhibit has broken new ground and been done once or twice, ensuing variations on it seem like somewhat weak attempts to get noticed. It seems to me just a bit too easy to use taboo underwear/secretion artifacts simply displayed "as is" as a way to get the general public's knickers in a knot. :cool: ;) Talk about Found Art. :D
Are we still on subject for this thread? Aren't tampon xmas ornaments sort of in the same genre?
Would all this be considered the purest form of "folk art"??