Back from Paros...lovely!
A quicky post:
A small group of thoughtful people could change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has. Margaret Mead
Erinzam is the easier to pronounce name representing the work of Erin Zamrzla. In limbo between the completion of graduate school and getting a real job, she spends most of her time making things. A designer, bookbinder and artist, she loves Adobe software, paper, glue, acrylic paint and thrift store finds. This blog is an attempt to document some of her favorite projects, materials and inspirations.
cardboard: "Re-Furnished" Recycled Cardboard Chairs from University of Idaho Student Designers---How to Build a Geodesic Dome out of Cardboard------Corrugated Cardboard Wall----"Flexible Love" Folding Chair-----
Amazing Cardboard Chair Design Unfolding RISD
Los Geniales muebles de Max McMurdo---LeTramac a Train Wreck?-----
crochet: Bea Camacho, ‘Enclose’ (2004), This clip is from the last hour of a video that documents an eleven-hour performance in real-time. During the performance I crocheted myself into a cocoon with red yarn---Crochet in the Expanded Field-----
craft: craftivism blog----craft australia blog----The Crafts Council is the UK’s national organisation for the promotion of contemporary crafts. Established in 1971, we are an independent body funded by the Arts Council England, responsible for promoting fine craftsmanship, encouraging high standards and increasing public awareness of contemporary crafts and applied arts. ----craft's council-----what's in the tree?---japanesecraft---craftster----a c a b a d o i m p e r f e c t o blog---crafts----A beautiful gift-----
CRABBY DAISY, Custom Cowboy Boot Purses
Handbags and Accessories
Convert an old worn boot into a cowboy boot purse.------
MadSilence, A father and daughter explore art, culture, and whatever else catches our fancy from different sides of the globe....a curious blog. See: The art of the plastic bag---
The house nurtures our sense of self, embodies our notions of intimate family life, and serves as our haven in a heartless world. But it’s also the site of Sisyphean labor, mostly female—cooking, minding, cleaning, imposing order on the fruits and detritus of bourgeois life,






