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Mrs. Veggie, Raglan, New Zealand/Scranton, PA Age and Occupation: 27, Director of Small Non-Profit Fiance's Age and Occupation: 42, PhD Student & Farmer Engagement Date: June 13, 2009 Wedding Date: August 2010 Venue: Indian Head Camp, Honesdale Pennsylvania About Me: I am a tree-huggin' farmer turned enthusiastic wedding-planner. I live in a house truck and wear flip-flops more often than shoes. In my old life I was a high school Spanish teacher in love with a crazy guy who lived off-the grid on a farm in New Hampshire. But, we decided to mix things up a bit, quit our jobs and move to New Zealand. My southern hemisphere lifestyle involves growing veggies, teaching, running our small non-profit, and surfing. I love laughing, singing, playing, and the inspirational Mr. Veggie (of course!). For our wedding, I am committed to throwing a killer party that celebrates our values without breaking the bank. Look forward to an eco-thrifty summer-campy weekend-long extravaganza.
About Mrs. Veggie

Eco-Thrifty Lamp

June 7th, 2010 @ 9:11 am by Mrs. Veggie

When I first decided to blog about our wedding, I titled my blog Eco-Thrifty Bride. Lately I’ve been despairing about why it is so hard to find products, services, and vendors that can accomplish both. Just like “wedding”; “eco”, “organic”, and “green” are words that, once mentioned, throw up a red flag that signals a substantial price increase is impending, whether it is warranted or not. These price increases stem from a classist, elitist sentiment that “eco” products are desired by and produced for the wealthy, an assumption that self-perpetuates when such products are priced at a premium, thus denying a vast segment of the population access to products and services that are healthy for both people and planet.

Well let me tell you a secret, hive. You don’t have to be rich to be green. You just need to be a little creative.

Case in point: lighting for our venue.

What I was after was unique and beautiful lighting option. I found Eco (at a cost of $379 NZD) and Thrifty (made of plastic and shipped many miles).

Eco-Thrifty Lamp :  wedding decor diy scranton 11 1

Eco v. Thrifty


And then I thought to myself, ‘Veggie. You have a lot of time. You know creative people. Let’s see what you can come up with.’ And I gathered some amigos and got to work.

I looked at a picture of the David Truebridge design I most admired and made a template for one of the pieces. The trickiest part of this was knowing how big to make it. I guessed 16cm, about 6 inches. Why? I don’t know. It just seemed to look pretty good. The next trickiest part was knowing how many to cut. We thought it looked like it was made up of two halves, each comprised of one central flower, surrounded by five other flowers. After careful deliberation we decided on 60—12 flowers of 5 petals each.

Eco-Thrifty Lamp :  wedding decor diy scranton 21 2

Teresa looks happy, but really she is grinning in the sheer agony of the hand cramps that ensue after cutting 30 flower petals out of corrugated cardboard.

It was a lot of tracing and a lot of cutting, which brings me to another point. The Truebridge lamps are made of wood, but not possessing the skills to cut wood, nor an eco-friendly supply, we chose to work with a slightly more available and maleable material, cardboard.

Eco-Thrifty Lamp :  wedding decor diy scranton 31 3

Dang. That was a lot of cutting. I hope 60 was enough.

After we had cut all of our pieces, we assembled them into 12 flowers, and sat and looked at the picture again.

Eco-Thrifty Lamp :  wedding decor diy scranton 41 4

Juan is an engineer. Even he was confused. Mr. Veggie is laughing because we got him to say “cinco”. Don’t know why that’s funny? Ask a friend from Spain to tell you the rhyme they say when someone says “cinco”.

We persisted and eventually the globe started to take shape.

Eco-Thrifty Lamp :  wedding decor diy scranton 5 5

Here we are celebrating the realization that 60 was in fact enough petals, and we don’t have to cut any more. Mr. Veggie is not as excited as we were. He obviously was not involved in the cutting of the petals.

And then we were done.

Eco-Thrifty Lamp :  wedding decor diy scranton 6 6

Hooray! Que Guay!

Here is our final product in action:

Eco-Thrifty Lamp :  wedding decor diy scranton 7 7

From CFL to OMG.

I love how our prototype turned out. There are a few things that I might do differently in the next edition, but overall this project was a win! The total cost was $10 NZD for a package of brads (those gold little attachment thingies) and about 3 hours of our time. Eco thrifty success.

Tags: decor, diy, scranton |
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28 Responses to “Eco-Thrifty Lamp”

1 2 

1.
MissMichele
Member
MissMichele (message)  134 posts, Blushing bee

Love!!! Any way you can post templates, or a more specific how to?

 
2.
Member Icon
Member
crayfish (message)  4,844 posts, Honey bee

So, I did a lot of crazy design work like this for my wedding too - I was lucky enough to find the ponoko.com website! They do laser cutting on a ton of different materials - cardbosrd being one of them. if you know how to use a vector illustration program (like Adobe Illustrator), it is super easy. They also have a making center in New Zealand, so it’s local for you!! Check it out if you have a creative bent in the future - it’ll save you all the hand cramps and give you perfectly cut shapes (we made our cake topper and centerpiece underlays with them :-) )!

 
3.
farmersdaughter
Member
farmersdaughter (message)  1,675 posts, Bumble bee

Looks awesome, veggie!

 
4.
emma5w
Member
emma5w (message)  547 posts, Busy bee

Wow. Just, wow.

 
5.
lairdea
Member
lairdea (message)  275 posts, Helper bee

Thanks for following up with this project. Ever since you mentioned your intentions a few weeks ago, I have been eager to see how (if) it would turn out. your final product is really really amazing. I am super impressed!! My hand hurts just thinking about this, but…given the correct instructions and encouragement, I might give it a try as well!

 
6.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Octopus (message)  1,446 posts, Bumble bee

Wow, what an awesomely successful project! It never would have occurred to me to even try to DIY a lamp like that!

 
7.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Trail Mix (message)  6,328 posts, Bee Keeper

Oooooh, that looks great!

How will you get it from NZ to the US? Just cut ‘em and then assemble them once you get here?

 
8.
Mrs. Pug
Bee
Mrs. Pug (message)  3,753 posts, Honey bee

whoa that’s hardcore! i can’t even tell you how you put that thing together!

 
9.
jordynrose
Member
jordynrose (message)  6,351 posts, Bee Keeper

Your prototype turned out great! If the cutting is too difficult, how about poster material? There is a middle of the line thickness that is not too flimsy and no where near as thick as posterboard. Also, now you have me curious about your “cinco” rhyme. :)

 
10.
LittleA
Member
LittleA (message)  57 posts, Worker bee

Would you be willing to share your template— given how AMAZING your prototype turned out? ;)

 
11.
Miss Locket
Bee
Miss Locket (message)  2,837 posts, Sugar bee

very cool…I would love to try something like this, but doubt I have the patience for it right now!

 
12.
Bride_Colleen
Member
Bride_Colleen (message)  627 posts, Busy bee

Wow! Looks like a lot of work.
I bought three paper chinese lanterns at Jysk for $5.00 each so it wasn’t too bad.

 
13.
Miss Argyle
Bee
Miss Argyle (message)  2,516 posts, Sugar bee

Oh, wow! That turned out awesome!

 
14.
MissLLC
Member
MissLLC (message)  206 posts, Helper bee

Ok, I’m stumped and I don’t have any friends from Spain. What’s the rhyme?? ;)

 
15.
Lillindy
Hostess
Lillindy (message)  7,974 posts, Bee Keeper

Success! I might have missed it, but will you be hanging actual light bulbs inside the cardboard? If so, is that a potential fire hazard?

And I’m stumped and don’t have friends from Spain so can you tell us what the rhyme is?

 
16.
OctPumpkin
Member
OctPumpkin (message)  593 posts, Busy bee

Wow, that’s some badaxx DIY. They look beautiful. I’m with @Miss Trail Mix - how are you going to ship them to the US?

 
17.
mrspaetz
Member
mrspaetz (message)  3,805 posts, Honey bee

WOW!! that sure is a lot of work!

 
18.
skibobrown
Member
skibobrown (message)  1,902 posts, Buzzing bee

Oooh! Really cool. I would also love a template if you get around to posting one. I would make one of these out of white cardboard for my dining room! :-)

 
19.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Veggie (message)  231 posts, Helper bee

@missmichele, @littleA, and @skibobrown-
Thanks for the love. I’m a little hesitant to put a template since a designer does make his living off of doing these. But, I think if you look at the pictures and the words of the post above, you will definitely be able to recreate this project. It was really easy. I made the template by blowing up a picture of the lamp and tracing one of the pieces. The key to connecting them is to make th flowers first and then join them together. Hope that helps.

 
20.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Veggie (message)  231 posts, Helper bee

@OctPumpkin and @Trailmix- I’m going to cut all of the pieces and connect them into the flowers. Then fold them like fans, and pack them away for travel. The assembly doesn’t take too long, so we’ll put them together at the venue the nigth before.

 
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Mrs. Veggie
Mrs. Veggie

Mrs. Veggie, Raglan, New Zealand/Scranton, PA Age and Occupation: 27, Director of Small Non-Profit Fiance's Age and Occupation: 42, PhD Student & Farmer Engagement Date: June 13, 2009 Wedding Date: August 2010 Venue: Indian Head Camp, Honesdale Pennsylvania About Me: I am a tree-huggin' farmer turned enthusiastic wedding-planner. I live in a house truck and wear flip-flops more often than shoes. In my old life I was a high school Spanish teacher in love with a crazy guy who lived off-the grid on a farm in New Hampshire. But, we decided to mix things up a bit, quit our jobs and move to New Zealand. My southern hemisphere lifestyle involves growing veggies, teaching, running our small non-profit, and surfing. I love laughing, singing, playing, and the inspirational Mr. Veggie (of course!). For our wedding, I am committed to throwing a killer party that celebrates our values without breaking the bank. Look forward to an eco-thrifty summer-campy weekend-long extravaganza.

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