ReDEUX: second-hand objects enjoying a second life

ReDEUX projects generally cost no money.

ReDEUX projects have caused me to knock on strange doors and ask for people's trash off the street.

ReDEUX projects make me happier than anything.

Objects always have the potential to be repurposed.

Entries in Board Games (3)

Monday
Jan212013

Rummikub Junior Valentines $1

   

I am always scouring thrift stores for old board games. I usually repurpose them on my entryway wall. I found a Rummikub Junior game for $1 and loved the graphics, so I bought it. I turned them into valentines. Each set of 8 cards has the corresponding verbiage on the back. I'm going to write little clues on each one and send my husband on a scavenger hunt around the house to lead him to THE PRIZE. If you happen to have this game and you want to make valentines with it, please download my template for free! If you don't have this game, good luck-it seems to be hard to find. Happy crafting!

Monday
Aug132012

Wall of Game Paraphernalia <$175

My entryway wall. Basically my childhood on a wall. My happy Durko-childhood with my siblings in our mid-Missouri basement with thick blue carpet perfect for playing games on. I don't know which we loved more: games or puzzles.

This might seem pricey for a ReDEUX, but the framing will get you every time. The games were all either free (my sweet MIL) or $1 at D.I.. I repurposed several frames I already owned, I used book cloth and art paper and things I already owned for the backing, but the giant Manhattan frame was a pretty penny. I still have plenty of room before I hit the vaulted ceiling.

This is the set of Clue cards that I played with as a kid. Miss Scarlett was fierce and Mrs. Peacock looked like a female Sherlock Holmes. The rusty knife still kind of gives me the chills when I look at it. I always thought I was good at Clue.

Then we have Triominoes (triangle dominoes) and assorted game pieces: Candy Land men, Monopoly hotel/houses and a wooden Monopoloy piece my MIL gave me. I don't ever remember Monopoly having wooden pieces, but several people have told me they remember them. The top shelf is all the Clue pieces. The figurines come with the current version and are totally lame compared to the metal replicas we played with.

My favorite Monopoly piece was a tie between the iron and the thimble (foreshadowing domesticity, I'm sure). Here I framed the dog. We are dog lovers, after all.  

My aunt sent me a set of playing cards that form a map of Manhattan when arranged correctly. I discovered it by accident. The cards came in a plain brown box with no instructions, so you can imagine my delight when this was realized. This piece starts a lot of conversations.

Vintage Clue, Crazy 8's (my first memories of Crazy 8's with Suz are before I was even in school), and Kids' Rummikub. I love the "moon man" on that one.

We loved Candy Land and LIFE. I would give my last wisdom tooth and some of Ari's college fund to anyone who could locate me a 1962 vintage Candy Land board. The one with the crooked little peanut brittle house and the molasses swamp. The new boards are ridiculous and the older board is just okay. I want the board from when I was a kid. I think I learned my colors from Candy Land. It's part of my DNA.

Chutes & Ladders: possibly the most annoying game in history. I liked it as a kid, although it seemed like I never got the #28 ladder as much as I deserved. As a mother I played this game with RE roughly 380 times before I figured out I could make the spinner land on whatever number she needed to win. This game never ends when truly left to chance.

LIFE was the game I think we played the most. Suz was always the banker and I always landed on the space that said "Your goat ate the neighbor's laundry. Pay up." To this day I hate being the banker because Suz always did it and I never appreciated her labor of love until now. Banking must have been a pain for her, especially because I always got the occupation that earned $8,000 on payday, which was a nuisance to deal out. Not like being the lawyer that got a fast orange $20K. We never once used a Promissory Note, although I appreciate their graphic beauty as an adult. The sound of the clickety-clackety LIFE spinner is a sound I can't hear without smiling. I put the green car with a boy and girl on the board I framed because Greg and I leased a green Honda Civic when we were first married and beginning our LIFE.

Other games we played that I have not yet framed: Aggravation, Hi-Ho Cherry-o, Hungry Hungry Hippos (our 1970s game wasn't a piece of junk like the game made today...our hippos endured five children slamming glass marbles in their mouths and nothing ever broke), Go Fish, Hangman, Sorry, and this huge box Suz had called 222 Games (my favorite game was called Lady Luck). We also had a game called Enchanted Forest that I bought from ebay. It's basically the neatest game ever and the board says "Made in West Germany."

Suz sometimes let me play with her Spirograph.  

I never understood Pit but often rang the orange bell.

The two games we ALWAYS played at our cousins' house were Battleship and Operation. I've been trying to find an Operation at D.I. because I think all the little white pieces would look so neat mounted on black in a tiny frame, but everyone that donates that game to D.I. does not include the pieces. There are currently 3 useless Operation games at D.I.

Wednesday
Apr252012

Clamshell Box from Game Board $1

Materials needed:

Game board (I scored all of my boards for $1 at D.I.)

Hot glue gun

X-acto knife

Straight edge

Cutting mat

Extra game cards, game money, playing pieces

Flat super-strength adhesive magnets (only if you want the box to snap shut)

Printable tutorial here.

During my third year at BYU I took Bookbinding from Chris McAfee, possibly the world's coolest teacher. Our final project was a clamshell box. I sliced the tip of my middle finger off with an x-acto knife the day before it was due and fainted. Then I had to go to the Campus Health Center to get it sewn back on. My hand was all bandaged up and Chris took pity on me and said, "I'll give you an A...just finish your box someday." I'd like to think of this project as some sort of redemption on my end for the free A I was graciously given.

I make these to use as birthday gifts for my daughter's friends. We fill them with goodies and so far they have been a hit. I like odd boards from games I've never heard of as well as the classic boards I grew up with. If I can ever get my paws on a vintage Candy Land I might die of delight. The games were so much better when I was a kid. Just sayin'.