I always want to love the up-cycling, trash-to-treasures DIY books. Keeping things out of the landfill and transforming them into functional and beautiful house hold objects is a natural fit for me. The problem is that while I want to love these books the reality is that I never do. The project inevitably are something along the lines of how to take an old skateboard and turn it into a shelf. Which 1) assumes I have access to an old skateboard, 2) need a shelf, and 3) assumes that even if I had an old skateboard and needed a shelf that I would find the shelf attractive, and not like litter stuck to my wall.
So you can imagine my delight when I got to page 64 of Upcycling and found six pages of instructions and photos on how to make my own skateboard shelf. To be fair to the skateboard shelf, any pretense of delight had already shriveled away when I saw the pallet-wood upholstered stool. Pallet wood is tempting because it is easy to find and free. Of course one of the reasons it is free is because it isn't always safe. Canada and the US regulations require manufacturers to treat the wood before shipping, either with chemicals or heat. If you manage to find pallet wood marked with HT it’s been heat treated, or kiln dried. If the boards are unmarked there’s also a strong chance it’s been chemically treated, which makes them dangerous, and they shouldn't be used where children have access to them, or anywhere near food prep, which includes planter boxes food is grown in (I'm looking at you Lean-To Pallet Herb Planter on page 74). Also? Pallet wood is notorious for splinters.
So how can I have such negative things to say about this book, yet feel justified in giving it three stars? Because of the rain. A few hours after I finished the book it occurred to me that the flash flood warnings being issued for my general area meant I should don my rain gear and see how close to flood stage the creek at the end of my block was. Happily my neighborhood only had puddles and not creek water to deal with, but walking home I passed by several pieces of furniture neighbors had put on the curb, hoping a passing driver would pick up and give the items a new home. Rather than fixating on my usual thought about curb furniture ("Really? Did it occur to any of these people to check the weather before sticking things out to get ruined?") I found myself pausing and thinking new thoughts, like "That might make a cool lamp base" and "If I cut the legs down that old table might make an interesting coffee table."
That, I realized was the purpose of McMurdo's book. To look at discarded objects and see the possibilities, to not be limited by the original and now unneeded purpose of an object. Yes, I realize this is the true purpose of all the upcycling books I had looked through and dismissed in the past, but McMurdo's instructions and photos make the entire process seem less haphazard and cumbersome, which is probably what freed my mind to be open to the possibilities of curbside furniture on a very wet day.
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