Nature + science + waste = A home in the country

Kevin McCloud is a British designer and television presenter best known for the show Grand Designs which features people who have designed and built (or rather hired people to build) their own homes in unusual, creative and sometime outlandish style. While the series usually features all the latest construction technology, McCloud (and a helpful band of friends) took a very different approach to a spin-off series that has just aired.

He bough a two acre site of wild woodland and tried to build his own shed, following two main principles: every material he used should be taken from the site itself if possible; if it wasn’t, then he should try to use materials that were in some way sustainable, natural or would otherwise have been thrown away.

The series has now concluded and it’s not really a spoiler to say it proved successful. While McCloud did have to rely on a few modern machines, he generally managed to either use traditional techniques or find some creative solutions. Much of what he did used techniques that are vary basic to scientists but were still amazing to see in this very stark before and after form.

To run down some of the key features:

The frame of the house came from two oak trees on the plot, though for the sake of his sanity McCloud cheated a little and eventually used a chainsaw to fell them. He then used gunpowder to split the logs.

The roof was made of shingles crafted from the logs, again eventually using professional machinery for the cutting (having done many by hand first), though McCloud and friends did attempt to split them using a Roman chariot like spear attached to a car axle.

The window came simply from melting sand in a kiln and then rolling the sheets using a log from the plot. While it was more translucent than transparant, and while the small sheets had to be cobbled together in a stained-glass window style of frame, the result did provide both adequate lighting and the some ability to see the outside world.

Lighting came from burning liquid fuel extracted from fat deposits taken from the sewers under the streets of central London, made up largely of cooking oil people thrown down the sink. It didn’t take at first, but a whisky-based pilot light did the trick!

The floor was made from a “cheese” made of milk and human hair.

An old bank safe became a wood burning stove.

A tractor rescued from a scrapheap provided the frame for a reclining chair, while the seat itself was a hide from a deer. (McCloud shot the deer himself, then provided urine to soak the hide.)

An outdoor toilet dropped (literally) into an underground chamber that provided biofuel for cooking. An expert who advised on its construction estimated that a dog’s daily droppings can produce enough fuel to boil a kettle, so it appeared that a human could self-power one or maybe two hot meals a day through a camping stove, making it a sustainable cooking source. However, the chamber needed to be full as a starter, so McCloud took a shovel and bag to the lions section of a nearby safari park, carnivores providing the most useful dung for this purpose.

A trip to a nearby “aircraft graveyard” provided the cylinder that houses a 737 jet engine. Turning this sideways, putting it in the ground and piping it in to a gas cylinder converted to burn wood produced a hot tub, albeit with a five hour start-up time.

A complex series of chains and gears from scrap allowed McCloud to lower and raise a wall section to become a drop-down veranda.

An attempt to make the ultimate in memory foam mattresses with a sack of cornflour and water (which makes a liquid that turns solid when pressure is applied) proved unworkable thanks to the sheer weight of the cornflour needed. Instead McCloud fell back on a more traditional woven frame.

Unwanted maps proved a suitable and eyecatching wallpaper.

The most labor intensive luxury came last: after McCloud shaved an alpaca, a local weaving group put in the 200 hours needed to turn it into a dressing gown.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fp71LsxRMog



Anastasiya Shpagina: Real-Life “Anime Girl” [Video]

Meet Anastasiya Shpagina, a 19-year-old from Ukraine, who uses camera angles and make-up tricks to look like a living, breathing anime character.

Check out this [non-English] video tutorial, where Anastasiya demonstrates one of her make-up looks:
http://youtu.be/AmXeQzbHwjo

[Via Guy Speed]

The Pokeymans Project: Pokemon Drawn By A Person Who’s Never Seen Them

You probably already know Noelle Stevenson, whose Broship of the Rings made the interwebz a better place last year. Now she’s drawing Pokemon… but she’s never even seen most of them. So, uh, how does that work? Stevenson explains: “Iโ€™m having Pokemon described to me by intoxicated art students while we watch RuPaulโ€™s Drag Race, and I know absolutely nothing about Pokemon, and they are laughing at me.”

This might be the best thing that’s ever happened. Even better than the Popinator. Possibly better than that Atari 2600 lamp I nearly wept over. (Maybe.) The descriptions Stevenson gets for the Pokemon are almost as good as the pictures she draws, and largely explain why this project is awesome and hilarious but the drawings are almost never close, because wow. For example:

Okay, well I guess there’s a chance that this one could… oh.

Maybe not.

OK, let’s try this again. Keldeo should be pretty easy to explain.

Right?

Honestly, this one didn’t have a chance.

There are several more examples up on Stevenson’s tumblr, How Are You I’m Fine Thanks. The project is so popular it has spawned its own fanart community, which takes the Pokeymans and pretties them up a bit. So awesome.

[Shout-out to BR for the link!]



Vote for a Ricktatorship in 2012 [T-Shirt]

In honor of last night’s “The Walking Dead” (did you see it?? It was goooooood!), Ript Apparel gives us this shirt FOR 24 HOURS ONLY.

…because this is not a democracy anymore. It’s a Ricktatorship!

[Via Ript Apparel]

Deadpool vs New York Comic-Con 2012 [Video]

Deadpool was at NYCC 2012 this weekend, and as usual, he got a little crazy entertaining the crowd. Oh, and speaking of New York Comic Con, have you guys look at our picture gallery of the event yet?

[critiques4geeks]

‘The World’s End’ Poster Revealed! [Pic]

Shaun of the Dead. Hot Fuzz. And now, The World’s End. The third installment in writer/director Edgar Wright’s “Blood and Ice Cream Trilogy.” You can catch the movie — involving a 20-year reunion, a pub crawl, and the Apocalypse — when it hits theaters on October 25, 2013. Until then, check out the poster, which was just released!

[Via Empire Online]

Today Only on Amazon: 47% Off Crucial 256 GB m4 2.5-Inch Solid State Drive (SSD) – $159.99 + Free Shipping

Today only: Just $159.99 for a 256GB Crucial SSD hard drive. That’s 47% off the drive’s initial retail price of $299.99. I’ve looked everyone online, and at that size, these drives (Crucial) rarely go for under $199, so if you’re looking for a SSD drive to boost the performance of your system, now might be the perfect time to get one.

256B Crucial M4 2.5IN SATA 6GB/S.what’s in the box: Crucial Technology 256GB m4 SSD 2.5 Inch Solid State Internal Drive and 3-Year Limited Warranty.

Crucial 256 GB m4 2.5-Inch Solid State Drive SATA 6Gb/s$299.99 $159.99 (47% Off)

This Is a 15-Acre QR Code Corn Maze

That’s it, farmers. The Kraay Family Farm in Alberta, Canada, just set a new bar. Keep the hayrides and scarecrows, but don’t act like fall fun can’t get a 21st-century update.

This corn maze, which covers an area of 15 acres total, has a 7-square-acre QR code right in the middle. You can scan it, too, but only if you’re Felix Baumgartner or in an airplane. (The code leads directly to the Kray Family Farm website.)

Naturally, the QR code is of record-setting size, clocking in at 14 times larger than the previous record-holding code. (Yeah, we didn’t know “Largest QR Code” was a record people were vying for, either. The more you know.)

[The FW]