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SCRAP Entrance |
"Wow! Look at all this stuff!"
That was my first reaction when entering SCRAP (Scrounger’s Center for Reusable Art Parts). According to their website, "SCRAP is a non-profit creative reuse center, materials depot, and workshop space founded in 1976 in San Francisco, California."Here's a meager list of things I had found:
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SCRAP Interior |
So what does this have to do with Children's Literature and/ or writing?
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Cabinet |
But don't take my word for it. Fellow SCBWI member, Katherine Taylor, Outreach Coordinator for SCRAP since September 2012, bought a thick book at the depot, found the images among the magazines and created a picture book for her three year old son.
He liked it.
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36 Animals |
Katherine, with a background in environmental science, works at obtaining donations for SCRAP from individuals and local businesses.
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Katherine Taylor |
SCRAP accepts manufactured and natural materials that can be used by artists and teachers. "We want things like office supplies, paper products, glass, wood, fabric, and metal parts. We like to get things in bulk for teachers to use in their classrooms. Check our website or e-mail us to make sure we accept what you have to donate."
On a board I saw a listing of some of the following Classroom Activity Projects: CD Tops, Testing Viscosity, Model Hermatocritt, Huchol Yarn Act and Game Lotto.
By the way, if you know a stockpile of telephone wire, Katherine wants to talk to you.
"Mixed-media artists can do a lot with it. They love wire. Also, it's good for kids' activities."
I recall a writing exercise where the instructor showed us an object and told the class to write for five uninterrupted minutes about said object.
What did it mean? Did it conjure up a childhood memory? Could we imagine who might have owned it? Who was the cat flying the plane?
"What's the weirdest donation you ever received at SCRAP?" I asked Katherine.
Kat once picked up a "pregnant mannequin from the Gap." Such oddities go fast. Some days SCRAP has a pregnant mannequin and then the next, the mannequin is gone.
Scraps of characters, plot, themes can be donated into the depository of this writer's mind one bright windy day in San Francisco, and then disappear the next if I don't write them down.
As a writer, I must sift through mental shelves of discarded material, donated anonymously by time and circumstance, and find the gold.
While you browse through your own depot, I encourage you dear reader to visit SCRAP, either in person or via their website: http://www.scrap-sf.org/
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"We have big paper needs," Katherine says, "Teachers don't get enough." |
"Mixed-media artists can do a lot with it. They love wire. Also, it's good for kids' activities."
I recall a writing exercise where the instructor showed us an object and told the class to write for five uninterrupted minutes about said object.
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What is it? |
"What's the weirdest donation you ever received at SCRAP?" I asked Katherine.
Kat once picked up a "pregnant mannequin from the Gap." Such oddities go fast. Some days SCRAP has a pregnant mannequin and then the next, the mannequin is gone.
Scraps of characters, plot, themes can be donated into the depository of this writer's mind one bright windy day in San Francisco, and then disappear the next if I don't write them down.
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Buttons. Sorry not actual gold. |
While you browse through your own depot, I encourage you dear reader to visit SCRAP, either in person or via their website: http://www.scrap-sf.org/
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I'd like to thank Katherine for showing me around the SCRAP depot.
In honor of Earth Day, SCRAP will participate in the Night Life at the California Academy of Sciences on Thursday, April 25th.
I'd like to thank Katherine for showing me around the SCRAP depot.
In honor of Earth Day, SCRAP will participate in the Night Life at the California Academy of Sciences on Thursday, April 25th.