"She refused to be bored, chiefly because she wasn't boring." Zelda Fitzgerald

Showing posts with label mushrooms. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mushrooms. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Store Bought Spore Prints

Spore prints are super-fun mushroom art + biological wonder. I remember making them with my sisters when we were little, lots of little cups and bowls stolen from the cupboards and upended over whatever little mushrooms we had found that day, usually a rainbow of little toadstools spread across black and white construction paper. Mama is an inveterate mushroom hunter and carefully taught all six of us how to do spore prints for both identification and beauty.

Last year, I magpied a great teaching idea. of monthly themes for our homeschool when a friend shared that she picks one a month to guide her unschooling rabbit trail style. September's theme was "Mushrooms" which, granted sounds insane...(A whole month on mushrooms???)...but it was a solid pick folks.

  • We're studying Egypt right now in history---Guess who ate mushrooms and thought they were only pharaoh level food!
  • We read lots of books about mushrooms from the library including our current read-aloud, Flight To The Mushroom Planet, a silly, gentle, beginner sci-fi story from the 50's.
  • We hiked our local parks and picked mushrooms as we found them, some to eat and some to just identify and poke apart on the dining room table.
  • We read about how mushrooms grow and started three purchased oyster mushroom kits to grow our own in the basement. 
  • We drew and painted mushrooms in art, talking about the anatomy as we went (cap, stalk, annulus...) and then we ended the month making spore prints to frame using store-bought portobello caps and I thought I'd share the process.
 First, remove the stem so you have a flat cap. Take care not to touch the gills (the part that looks like the pages of a book...as they are delicate and damaging them means a print that's less pretty.
 Lay each cap on a sheet of paper (white if you're using portobellos since they have dark spores) and then cover with bowls or cups to protect them from air currents that may disturb your design. Leave them to rest overnight.
 In the morning open up the covers and see what prints your caps have made. Portobellos have soft chocolate brown spores but mushrooms generally have all different colors and its fun to see the rainbow of results if you try it with random wild mushrooms.
Then, get out a magnifying glass and check out the micro-beauty of it all. Spores are miscroscopic and normally not visible to us, part of the minute detritus that we breath in and walk through along with the pollen and dust of the universe. Making spore prints is a chance to see them there, millions at a glance, in all their downy glory. The delicate outline of the gills is also super pretty, printed on the page like so many rays of shadow radiating around the stalk.

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Monday, July 12, 2010

Back To The Nest

Its still hotter than blazes and we're back home again. Am fervently praying for a cool September when we will begin life in our new non-a/c home that is practically without insulation and does not come complete with astoundingly maintained pool directly across the parking lot. Blech. There are small perks to the grey, 80's architectured condo life.

But, yes...we're back and in the stage of life wherein we will keep our apartment immaculate for showings, while trying to stay relatively cool and madly packing all we own in preparation for what we hope will be a real genuine move in a maddening number of days. Whew!

Have a helping of vacation photos while I run off to the farm for milk and our vegetable share!








































Mmm.....it was a good trip.

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