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Reusing License Plates to Make Art
Washington DC

7-15 lic art 1.jpg
During a recent visit to the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, we came across this artwork by Mike Wilkins titled "Preamble" (to the U.S. Constitution) made from license plates. With all the transplants to DC, we love the idea of reusing out-of-state license plates as artwork or home decor. In our house tour of Helen's DC condo, we showed Helen's clever use of an old license plate as a toilet paper holder (shown again below the jump)...

 
 

7-15 lic toilet holder.jpg

7-15 license plate art.jpg

What else could you do with old license plates?

- Rachael

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GREEN IDEAS, reuse, Washington DC, Smithsonian

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Comments (13)

You can find stuff made from old license plates at uncommongoods.com

posted by *~Heather~* on July 18th 2008 at 3:40am
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When junk becomes art, its the first sign civilization is in decline.

posted by tinnie on July 18th 2008 at 4:10am
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that not art.

posted by superrenee on July 18th 2008 at 4:12am
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Looks like Applebees.

posted by yakimushi on July 18th 2008 at 4:28am
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Nonsense. Folk art through the ages has used found objects. The Jingle Dress used for some Native American dances gets its jingle from rolled tobacco lids - a beautiful use for an ugly product. Tin cans can be transformed into pierced lanterns, and some really lovely South African lamps of flowers from plastic bottles were posted earlier here on AT. They're all brilliant ways to keep trash out of landfills.

You can like it or not, but don't worry about the decline of civilization.

posted by whytephoenix on July 18th 2008 at 5:08am
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Diana Vreeland said the end of civilization was "unshined shoes."

posted by Mr. Dangerous on July 18th 2008 at 5:56am
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I like it. It must've taken forever to do this.

posted by Snugglitas on July 18th 2008 at 6:07am
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Unshined shoes; junk as art--well, where are we, and what are we doing in this handbasket?!

posted by jen_g on July 18th 2008 at 6:19am
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When my grandpa passed away, I inherited his collection of license plates -- all 50 states, most of them from mid-century or earlier. I've been wanting to do something with them, but didn't want to look like, well, Applebee's. (Altho I do think junk can make beautiful art, Applebee's doesn't cut it.) Any suggestions?

posted by mjoe on July 18th 2008 at 8:43am
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My grandparents hung old license plates on the vertical part of their wooden stairs leading to the basement. It added some visual interest to an otherwise bare space. The plates were uniformly red with white lettering, so there was no "Applebees" random effect.

I wish we'd taken the plates with us when we sold the house - the licenses were from the 30's.

posted by dianalily on July 18th 2008 at 9:23am
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A former friend of mine had license plates hanging all over his house. One wall was nothing but the 50 states. Unfortunately, he was also a slob and a pack rat, so I don't remember his license plate art fondly.

posted by madampince on July 18th 2008 at 6:24pm
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Random items re: license plates in general and this post in specific:

REAL restaurants, taverns, and incidental venues did this before Applebee's, etal. It's a matter of whether you can pull off the look better than they could.

I winced when my father changed the plates on ... don't remember if it was my car after all... but the NY plates with the statue of liberty - he BENT IT IN TWO, before I could say "but I want that!" He unbent it for me and it looked like crap and I just said throw it out.

I would like to see a 50-state wall of ITMFA plates.

When I moved into my apartment (in Massachusetts), I found a license plate for Oregon left behind the radiator, which is cool since I've never been to Oregon.

License plates or tags - is a strange way to represent the preamble to the constitution. Everyone knows driving is a privilege, not a right, first off. They are mostly improbably vanity tags. How was this collected? I get the road trip, see this America vibe from it.

posted by K T G on July 20th 2008 at 6:01am
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Those are all very cool and very folk art. Are they something I would want to have in my home? No. However I can appreciate the time, resources and effort that went into making them.

posted by Seaside on July 20th 2008 at 11:19am
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