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Recipe

Cardboard pulp tile

Corrugated cardboard pulped and pressed into a thicker, sturdier board than recycled paper. The corrugations break into long, locking fibres that give the dried tile real strength.

Every A New Field recipe has been run in a domestic kitchen or community hall. Read the safety notes before you start and adapt for your venue.

What you’ll make

A grey-brown tile, dense and slightly fibrous, that can be sanded smooth or left textured. Stronger than paper pulp brick R037 thanks to longer fibres.

Flexible slots (flex around your material)

  • Long fibre

    Cellulose-rich fibre60g shredded

    Long plant fibres. Gives tensile strength to papers, pulps and composites.

    Examples Corrugated cardboard, kraft paper, newspaper, cotton rag, plant-fibre stems (retted)

    Note, Tear into 1-2cm squares before soaking. Soak overnight if possible for easier blending.

Fixed ingredients

  • Starch paste · 30g paste, Cook 10g cornstarch into 30ml water until thick and translucent. This binds the fibres as the tile dries.
  • Water · 1L, Soak the cardboard in warm water before blending.

Equipment

  • Blender or a sturdy bucket and stick
  • sieve
  • shallow mould
  • weights
  • baking paper.

Refinements and variations

  • Mix in coffee grounds or tea leaves for character
  • Add a teaspoon of charcoal for a darker tile.

Source notes

Plain brown corrugated cardboard works best. Avoid cardboard with heavy print or wax coating.