 |
| "Win": tape junk paper collage. |
Want music?
Click: FJK & Masego, Tadow

2GN2S
I'm not sure if it's the ripping or the speed, but to collage with shipping tape is really fun! A step-by-step? Okay.
All you need is any clear shipping tape, mine is Scotch brand.
Magazines, newspaper, junk mail ... paper. High gloss, processed, varnished papers may resist the tape. In my opinion, cheaper, thinner papers work best.Then a substrate, or whatever you want to do your collage on.
I am going to use the above yellow 4.5 x 6" postcard ...
Lay the strapping tape on top of the area you want to pick up
(heavier paper may need to be burnished) ... then rip it up!
 |
| step 1 |
Apply the tape to the substrate. You can't completely control what adheres to the tape, but I think that's part of the fun?  |
step 2
The tape that doesn't adhere paper, adheres to the substrate, I use glue stick on the back of the adhered area of tape.
|
 |
| step 3 |
No limit on how many layers. There seems to be a learning curve ... or ripping curve? I am not an expert, but it is fun ripping & layering. My first attempts were too busy, too many layers, so this one I stopped before. You can be crop to catch a good area.BTW: There is a popular technique also using shipping tape,
adhering the tape onto the area to be transferred,
then wetting the tape and rubbing off the adhered paper.
The remaining image on the tape is a transparent transfer.
A more accurate copy & with more time involved.
This is not that, but a different effect.



Sodium-ion batteries just became one of the most significant clean energy breakthroughs of the decade — and the world's largest battery manufacturer is already making them at scale. MIT Technology Review named sodium-ion batteries one of its top 10 breakthrough technologies of 2026, and Chinese battery giant CATL confirmed it began manufacturing sodium-ion batteries at industrial scale in 2025. The technology matters because it replaces lithium, a geographically concentrated and increasingly expensive mineral, with sodium — an element so abundant it is literally extracted from ordinary seawater and table salt, making it one of the most universally accessible materials on Earth.
Sodium-ion batteries carry real limitations compared to their lithium-ion counterparts: they cannot pack as much energy into the same cell volume, limiting their appeal for applications where weight and size are critical constraints. But for the two applications where energy density matters less than cost and longevity — grid-scale electricity storage and smaller urban electric vehicles — sodium-ion cells are proving genuinely competitive. Grid storage does not need to be lightweight. It needs to be cheap, durable, and deployable at massive scale, precisely the profile that sodium-ion chemistry delivers when manufactured at the volumes CATL is now achieving in China.
Clean energy investors are increasingly bullish on sodium-ion batteries as one of the most economical near-term solutions for grid-scale storage, particularly when paired with solar generation in hybrid solar-plus-battery facilities. As alternative battery chemistries like sodium-ion and zinc reach commercial maturity, analysts project further cost reductions that could accelerate grid storage deployment beyond even the record-setting pace already set in 2025.
Source: MIT Technology Review, 2026

A 2+ minute video, Drawing the eye , here.
Just because ...
 |
| Maroon Oriole |

Tuesday's Smiles ...
Hoping you feel all the good things in your day.