Nicole Alderman

steward
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since Feb 24, 2014
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Biography
Five acres, two little ones, one awesome husband, 12 ducks (give or take), and a bunch of fruit trees and garden beds. In her spare time, Nicole likes to knit, paint, draw, teach kids, make fairies & dragons, philosophize, and read fantasy. She doesn't HAVE spare time, but does like to fantasize about it!
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Recent posts by Nicole Alderman

John C Daley wrote:Is Milk Paint the stuff you speak of?
'Milk paint is an ancient, eco-friendly, and non-toxic paint made from milk protein (casein), lime, and natural pigments.
Sold as a powder, it is mixed with water for a durable, matte finish ideal for furniture restoration, "shabby chic" rustic looks, and children's toys.
It is zero-VOC, breathable, and provides a unique matte look. '



I used milk paint for most of the kids houses, and have made it frequently in the past (even painted my whole den with it). But, one of my students is allergic to casein, so I need something else. She's also allergic to nuts and probably other things, so I'm going to veer away from using wheat paste, too, just in case.

Thus, I'm trying to make "milk paint" without the milk/casein for a binder. I'm trying gum arabic as a binder, but I don't think it's as strong as a binder as casein. So far, though, it seems to be working.
1 day ago
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    Wandering around the internet, I've noticed a few things. This article, by the Mud Home about limewashes, sums it up pretty well:

    The Mud Home wrote:Note: You need a binder like wheatpaste or casein to help seal the limewash, otherwise your whitewash may remain dusty, and can leave marks on clothes. If you can source good quality mature lime putty, a binder may not be necessary.



    (1) If you use high-quality slacked lime, made from quicklime and not from hydrated lime, it might not need a binder. High quality slacked lime is really expensive (I know, because I've bought it before!)

    (2) Common binders are wheat and milk/casein.

    I'm trying to avoid things that kids/parents might be allergic to with this recipe, so both the wheat and milk/casein are out. This mixture is supposed to be an alternative for the kids who are allergic to the milk paint. Both wheat and milk add as natural glues to stick the pigment to the surface. Gum arabic has that roll in watercolors. While it might not be as good, I'm thinking it's decent enough  to be used as an alternative. So far, it's testing pretty good.
    2 days ago
    Looking online, the biggest problem people have with clay and lime paints is that they dust off. When I'd made my little Egyptian cartouche boards, plastered with lime, that was the biggest problem: it dusted right off. When I added the gum Arabic to that paint, it didn't dust off.

    Cartouche with a background of lime + gum arabic on wood. Hieroglyphs made with water color and pencil


    I went over to test the paint on my little house. I also compared the tests to the milk paint I painted my den's walls with almost two years ago. I'm expecting the milk paint to be stronger, since it's had nearly 2 years for the lime to calcify....compared to just 10 hours for my lime + gum arabic paint.

      Test 1: I rubbed on the white, red, yellow and purple paints with my finger. I could not see any paint coming off. But, they're all pretty close to my skin color, so it's hard to tell.

      Test 2: I scraped the paint with my fingernail, and it did come off...much like if you scrape at chalk or limestone. But, if I scrape at 2-year old milk paint on my den wall with my fingernail, it comes off, too, with about the same amount of effort. Most paints come off if you scrape at them, honestly.

      Test 3: I rubbed at the paint with a black cloth. I had to rub hard to get a faint amount of color. That seems pretty good! The red paint (no clay) seemed a bit sturdier than the yellow (which had clay)--probably because there was less gum arabic percentage in the clay paint. I then rubbed at the milk paint on my den wall with the black cloth. The paint came off, but I needed to rub more and the amount of color on my cloth was less.


    In summary: My 10 hour old lime + gum arabic + pigment is about as good at my 2-year old milk paint on my den's wall.

    I haven't tested them against water erosion. But, honestly, my milk paint doesn't hold up against more than a season or two of outdoor weather, especially if it doesn't have an "outdoor fixative" and isn't sealed with oil (see me repainting my milkpaint sign. The homemade milk paint did not do as well as the store-bought Real Milk paint. And, all of it did better than milk paint I've made from scratch and painted outside. I'd made milk paint with a Forest School group, and they'd painted LOTs of surfaces, , and nearly all of the paint was gone after a year unless it was sheltered from the rain.)
    2 days ago
    Maybe there could be a poll response for "I wish!" Because I wish I had a root cellar. But, my ground is wet and digging by hand is hard.
    2 days ago
    I finally got some time tonight to test things out. I wish I'd had time earlier more than a few days before when kids will be painting with it. But, life is busy and I've got too many class projects going all over the place!

    Anyway, what I tried today was:
    • 1 part: Gum arabic + water mixture (about 50/50 mixture of gum arabic and water)
    • 1 part: Slacked lime! (After my adventures in frescos, I put some hydrated lime in a big yogurt bucket and covered with water. That was March 17th. There's some nice slacked lime in there now!)
    • 1 part: Pigment
    • (optional) 1 part: Kaolin clay


    All those numbers are really hazy, as I eyeballed everything. I applied the paint to my old wattle and daub miniature house. I really should have taken a true before picture, as a lot of the daub had cracked and some paint was chipping off. Alas, I did not. Here's a waaaay before picture (before the daub and paint cracked...2 years ago).



    Here's some of my observations:

    • It's really easy to make this mixture way too watery! At first I was matching the amount of gum arabic mixture to the amount lime + pigment. This made a super runny paint! It was more of a lime wash...which would be really hard for kids to use!
    • Adding more pigment fixed the runniness issue. This is what I did for the purple color. It made for a much more vibrant color, which was nice. I'm hoping the gum arabic is strong enough to hold both the lime and the pigment together and to the wall!
    • When I mixed up new white, I made it too runny again. This time, instead of adding calcium carbonate (white pigment), I added kaolin clay, figuring that clay paint is a thing. Of course, clay paint is usually done with wheat paste to hold it together. But, gum arabic does holding/sticking, so hopefully it'll work. This mixture was nice and thick, and helped smooth over cracks and (maybe) stick some cracked daub pieces together. We'll test whether it actually stuck stuff together tomorrow!
    • When I made the yellow paint, I used both kaolin and yellow ocher. Yellow ochre is a a clay, too, so this made for a nice, thick paint. It made things very smooth. The daub, even when not cracked, was still very rough and bumpy. The kaolin clay + pigment made a nice thick paint. The kaolin did lighten the color, though.
    • When I did the red, I used red iron oxide for the pigment, and didn't add any clay. I wanted a bright, vibrant red. This was  roughly equal parts pigment, gum arabic mixture, and lime. This mixture was pretty nice, and not made too light by the lime. This red got painted largely over the top of the milk paint.
    • I wanted to test the lime paint over the milk paint for a few reasons. (1) some kids will probably want to paint over their milk paint. I should make sure nothing bad happens! and (2) I just really wanted to fix up my little house! Painting is addictive!


    I also painted all four colors on a piece of raw daub that had cracked off. We'll see how that does!

    Please excuse my terribly un-aesthetic pictures, taken after midnight on my freezer. But, hey, it has my milk paint walls in the background, so that's something!
    2 days ago
    Another type of food preparedness/pantry is the one we keep outside.

    I really like perennial and self-seeding plants, like kale, berries, sorrel, alliums, and fruit trees. They don't take much work, and they survive when life gets crazy and I don't have time to care for them. They also usually pack a lot of vitamins and are expensive when bought in the store!

    I really like the edible "weeds" that grow on my property. I can easily encourage them to multiply and create more food/medicine. The nettle is delicious for dinner. The mint helps my husband's Crohn's. The cleavers are good for my psoriasis. The dandelion is good for pretty much everything. Even if I don't have a chance to try and preserve them, I still can eat them for months of the year without much effort at all.

    My garden this year might just end up being perennials and some peas, carrots, kale and radishes and potatoes....because they're all like to grow well here and my kids will go outside harvest/eat them without much help. Some years I can do more. More would be better. But, this year is my disaster, and I'm going to be grateful for what I can do, when I can do it.
    2 days ago
    At this point in my life, I've basically been in survival mode for the past 6 months. Having the extra food stores of food we like to eat and that I can quickly cook has been super helpful.

    There's totally ways to level-up my pantry use. I really appreciate Erica Straus' Food Storage For People Who Don’t Hate Food article. It has great advice for organizing and improving food storage for food people actually eat. Writing dates and prices on cans would also be super useful. I'd also love more area to store food.

    But, right now, I'm still in the throes of disaster (It's why I've not been on permies much this year). My husband's Crohn's flared up right at the beginning of the school year....the same school year that I increased the amount of classes I'm teaching from 2 to 7. It's been me taking care of my husband, cooking all the meals, homeschooling my kids, creating all the curriculum for my classes, prepping for all my classes, maintaining the house, and teaching my classes. I'm barely able to juggle all the balls I need to juggle. It's a lot like the year that inspired me to write The reality of homesteading has dissolved my "prepper"/homesteading fantasies.

    When I prep, it's this sort of life chaos I'm thinking of. Sure, we get 4 day long power outages every few years, and sure, worse things might happen. But, really, I'm preparing for when life goes crazy. When there's not enough money or time. Right now, I'm really grateful for the times I was able to get out to get groceries to buy lots of food my family will eat that's easy to cook. When we were all sick with some horrible crud for two weeks, I was super grateful for the coconut water, broth, tea, and crackers I'd bought when they were on sale.

    Sometimes, life is too crazy to do really good food prep. Sometimes it's too crazy to grow a good garden or really organize the pantry. But, there's still stuff we can do that makes life better for "future me." I can buy extra food that my family will eat when it's on sale or at our local Grocery Outlet. Sure, that means I have a bag full of meat sticks sitting in my living room because I don't know where to put it and it's one of the few foods my husband can eat that isn't cooked from scratch. It's not perfect, but it helps!
    2 days ago