Using VR to Drive Home the Climate Crisis
At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, this past January, the movers and shakers of the financial, government and...
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Art is a great way to get creative, fire up different parts of the brain, and see something in a new way.
To make colourful, sustainable inks that don’t come with excess packaging or contain microplastics that end up in nature, just reach for plants from the kitchen, forest, or garden. Betty Carpick, an artist and arts educator in Thunder Bay, Ontario, of Cree and Eastern European heritage, knows this well. She actively uses a sustainable method for creating inks in educational settings.
