this post was submitted on 19 Dec 2025
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The Grind & Bind Art Alchemist's Guild

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Good day and welcome to The Grind and Bind Art Alchemist's Guild.

An artist's community for the kind of people who don't just paint, they scavenge pigment from rotten leftovers. It's for potters who dig their clay from riverbeds, for weavers who spin their own wool (and probably know the name of the sheep,) and it's for digital artists who hack away at their creative endeavors.

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A one-off idea turned into a week of insanity and mutiple trips to the hardware store.

I had walnuts, I make paints, I'm decent at carpentry and I'm just getting into bookbinding — It should have been easy.

Now? My fingers are covered in super glue and I burned off all my knuckle hairs.

It started with figuring out how to cut a walnut into two perfect halves — there is a technique. For all my neat dremel cutting bits, the best method was this youtube video.

My neat dremel bits cleared out the inside and I used wet/dry sandpaper to make the edges flat.

But I made the rookie walnutsmith mistake of adding that silver wire border before anything else. The smallest hinges at the store were still too big and I didn't want to wait for an order or make my own. While grinding down the screws, stupidly while they were still attached, the shell cracked and the wire popped off. Superglue came to the rescue, even though I'd decided by then that I hated the wire.

I cut pieces of soft leather to cover the hinge, which looked marginally better, and imbedded a metal button on each side to wrap the leather cord for closure. They also make a platform for the walnut to sit level when it's open. Mineral oil and beeswax was my finish/waterproofing.

The paint dividers are stiff belt leather, and I made the paints using the lake pigment method with my watercolour recipe:

20g of dry pigment to 20g of watercolour base (80g gum agaric solution, 20g glycerine, 20g honey and two drops of clove oil.)

Green came from spinach, yellow from lemon rind, which smells amazing, and the dark brown is iron oxide from steel wool treated with hydrogen peroxide and salt water.

The book covers use the same scrap leather as the cord with a few slices of watercolour paper cut to fit, sewed together with cotton thread.

On the whole, it's more neat than practical. I'm new to the walnut craft so hopefully the next one will be an improvement.

I'm still going to my next live painting group with this as my "kit" to see what happens.

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[–] Wren@lemmy.today 4 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Thanks!

My paint "lab" consumes about half the kitchen. Or do you mean the one in the nutshell? The colours are the paints.

Let's see what I got... and yeah, my "muller" is a glass butt plug sanded down. Honestly? The handle is way easier on my hands than a traditional muller. Don't worry, it's only for paint. Yes, my squigee is a library card.

[–] Droechai@piefed.blahaj.zone 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

That setup looks great! I love to see peoples passion work areas :)

Regarding your muller, a tool isnt what the manufacturer intended but what the user does with it. See the amount of screwdrivers being used as probing stick, lid opener, wood chisel, car keys, paint and rust remover plus small mallet with the handle ;)

[–] Wren@lemmy.today 2 points 3 weeks ago

Well said. Aim for shape purity, not branding cuckery.

Thanks! It's the most organized part of my life. You gave me an idea for a "Rate my set-up" style post for the weekly discussion.