Wednesday, 9 November 2016

Glass Painting Classes


Come and learn Glass Painting with us this festive season and make your own beautiful glass lamps, wineglasses and jars! 


Have you ever looked at a Tiffany lamp or a picture of stained glass windows and wondered if you could do it yourself? Well, now you can!


At our Glass Painting class, we teach you how to draw on glass with liner paste and then how to paint on glass with transparent paint. You'll learn how to apply the liner to to make faux stained glass outlines before applying the special paint. We also teach you how to avoid common mistakes and the best way to display your finished piece.

You can bring along a glass item of your own (like a whiskey glass, a highball glass, a glass sugar jar or a glass rice bowl but not bigger than that as the liner takes  some time to dry properly before the paint can be applied to your piece) OR you can purchase a suitable glass item at our Outreach Office where we are holding the class.

Due to space constraints, classes are limited to a maximum of 7 participants only.

The first class will be on Saturday 26 November 2016 from 1.30pm to 3.00pm.

Charges are as follow -
Members – RM15.00 (bring your own glass) / RM20.00 (using our glass)
Non-members - RM18.00 (bring your own glass) / RM24.00 (using our glass)

Note – prices above are applicable for one glass item per person only.




Friday, 4 November 2016

Festive Season Glass Painting!

With the festive season fast approaching, our next project is Glass Painting! While we’re preparing festive gift items for our Garden Shop, we’re also looking into classes for those interested to learn so keep checking back or look for us at Facebook (botanika@gmail.com) for more updates.

There are actually two kinds of glass painting – transparent and opaque. Here’s a little bit about how we do transparent glass painting for those who are thinking of joining us. (Opaque glass painting will be covered in a separate post later.)

First of all, you need a clean glass – bowls, goblets, jars or glasses are all fine. You can use cut glass, too if you like. Wash your glass thoroughly to remove oil and dust. Wipe it clean with a dry cloth and set it aside for at least 10 minutes to make sure it’s thoroughly dry.

Then you can start outlining your design with a special black liner paste. This creates black outlines which give a stained glass effect like those in the picture, when done.

 Leave your outlined glass aside for a day or so to make sure the paste is completely dry when you are done outlining.

Now you can start filling in the outlines with transparent glass paint.

For more about transparent glass painting, our contact details are - 

Saturday, 22 October 2016

Our First T-shirt Painting Lesson!

We had two sessions of t-shirt painting today in spite of the drizzle and some of our class members produced some really lovely art on their t-shirts.

Here's the start of a wisteria by our class member. As part of today's lesson, they also learned about mixing paint to get the shades they wanted. When you're working with commercial dyes and paints, blue and green doesn't always get you purple - at least not the shade you'd expect.

Part of the lesson was also about getting the painting medium to the right consistency to achieve a suitable Chinese watercolour effect on t-shirts and the kind of modified brushstrokes to get those particular effects.

Another member wanted to try painting on a dark coloured t-shirt instead. That meant a separate lesson using different media. The dyes we normally use for white or very light coloured t-shirts won't work on dark coloured t-shirts so it was exciting for the others to see what would happen. 

Judging from the chrysanthemum on the right, it was quite successful, don't you think?

A bonus was the dry-brush effect the student created when painting with a very different medium from our usual t-shirt paints.

Join us next week from 1.30pm to 3.00pm for another exciting and interesting session of t-shirt painting!







Thursday, 13 October 2016

Paint Bags and T-shirts!


Learn how to paint on cotton Bags & T-shirts with waterproof silkscreen printing dyes on Saturday 22 October 2016! Your t-shirts and bags can be washed and re-washed many times without fear of the colours being washed out. 

Join us at our Outreach Office and learn to make some beautiful festive gifts that you'll be proud to give to your loved ones and which they'll love wearing or using. And just in time for the coming festive seasons, too!

Day/Time : Saturday 1.00pm to 2.30pm
Maximum No. of Participants : Maximum 6 persons
Price per person : RM15.00 (Members) / RM20.00 (Non-Members)

The following Terms and Conditions apply -
1. Participants must bring one WHITE or light-coloured T-shirt of their own.
2. Participants who wish to paint bags instead may bring their own white or light-coloured bag.
Note : Bags should be made of cotton or cotton-canvas.
3. Participants who wish to purchase our bags or T-shirts may do so at the following prices -
    White T-shirt : RM15.00 (Members) / RM18.00 (Non-members)
    Large Bag : RM15.00 (Members) / RM18.00 (Non-members)
    Small Bag : RM12.00 (Members) / RM15.00 (Non-members)

We'll provide the brushes and dyes for every lesson where you'll learn one-stroke painting to paint directly with the printing dyes. In four lessons we'll teach you all the basics for painting four different flowers and leaves.

And...if you're not confident about doing that by yourself, we'll provide a simple template with every lesson and teach you how to transfer the black and white drawing to your own T-shirts!

Lesson 1 : Madagascar Periwinkle
Lesson 2 : Japanese Rose
Lesson 3 : Helliconia
Lesson 4 : Blue Pea Flower (Bunga Telang)




Wednesday, 14 September 2016

The Langurs Project (Updated)

Those of us living in Penang have grown up with the fact that there are and hopefully, always will be monkeys at the Botanic Gardens. But few of us give our monkeys much thought other than as adorable curiosities to be shown to tourists or friends from other places. After all they are practically ubiquitous to the extant of being nuisances occasionally. What we don't realise is that it will take hard work to keep our beloved monkeys.

Members from The Friends of Botanic Gardens Society attended a talk in support of the Langurs Project given by Ms Joleen Yap at the Spice Gardens. The aim of the talk was to educate the public on the langurs of Penang Island. A graduate student of the USM, Ms Yap and her team under the supervision of Dr. Nadine Ruppert are studying the langurs in the Teluk Bahang, Botanic Gardens and Cerok Tok Kun Forest Reserves.

So what are langurs? For starters, they are not macaques, the more commonly seen denizens of the Gardens' trees, lawns and practically everywhere else they can beg or steal free food. This is a macaque.

This is a langur. Langurs are also monkeys. Members of the genus TrachypithecusPenang's langurs are also known as Dusky Leaf Monkeys and are different from the Gray or Hanuman Langurs of India. Our langurs are very shy, much darker and have very sweet faces like this one seen at the Gardens. 


They are also classified as Near Threatened (IUCN 3.1) on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species* (see below) though our Penang langurs, cute as they might be, have not been properly studied before Ms Yap's academic research study.

The purpose of Ms Yap's study is to identify our local langurs' Diet, Activity Pattern and Habitat Use. Ms Yap's study is a primary base-line study and very important in determining conservation efforts. 

Ms Yap currently has a study grant from the Rufford Foundation but more local sponsorship and participation would certainly help to achieve the noble aim of her work. 

The Friends of the Botanic Gardens Society is supporting Ms Yap's efforts and we hope to hold a similar talk for our members and the public if there is sufficient interest.

Please indicate your interest by emailing your response to our email address at Botanika with the title: Langurs talk: OK. 


*The IUCN Red List or IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (sometimes just Red Data List) is the interntaional community's most comprehensive inventory of the conservation status of biological species world-wide. The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) is the world's main authority in such matters and Regional Red Lists assess the risk of extinction of various species within each of those regions.


Thursday, 8 September 2016

Printing On Coloured T-shirts

Learn how to print your own designs with beautiful leaves on black or coloured t-shirts! It's fun and it's a really useful way of recycling old t-shirts to make them new again.

From free-form designs to patterns, plant sprays and more, we teach you how to print long-lasting images on your own coloured t-shirts that will last through repeated washing. 

Day/Time : Saturday either 1.30pm - 3.00pm or 3.30pm - 5.00pm
Maximum no. of participants : 6 per session
Open to Members, Non-members and Children over 8 years of age
Price per participant :
Members : RM15.00 per person per lesson
Non-members : RM20.00 per person per lesson


The following Terms and Conditions apply -
1.Participants must bring ONE black or dark-coloured T-shirt of their own.
*Note : T-shirts MUST NOT be 100% cotton. 
2.Participants who do not have their own black T-shirts may buy one from us.
3.Participants who wish to do extra pieces may also buy one of our black T-shirts.
4.Members price for black T-shirts is RM15.00 per pc.
5.Non-members price for black T-shirts is RM18.00 per piece.

We'll provide suitable paint or dyes, brushes and palettes for participants, as well as lessons on how to make or form your own designs or patterns.



Friday, 26 August 2016

Food Testing Is Fun!

Over at the Friends of the Botanic Gardens Society Outreach office premises, we dearly love our tea and lunch breaks because sometimes our members kindly bring some of their latest culinary discoveries for taste-testing. Of course, it isn't always a formal "I'm bringing some goodies for you all to try out," kind of situation. Very often, a member will discover some new food stall or recipe and just bring some delicious titbits to share.

And it was during one of these tea breaks that the subject of salads and dips came up. With the different herbs we have growing in our garden, the main subject of conversation was using these aromatic plants in the easiest (and tastiest) of ways. Salad dressings and dips!

A bit of research tells us that apart from cooking it in soups or curries our neighbours up north, the Thais, use lemongrass as a salad dressing, too. A common combination is ginger, coriander (Americans call it cilantro), garlic, lime juice and chili. The Italians, on the other hand, favour oregano, basil and parsley with freshly ground black pepper and balsamico (balsamic vinegar)or white wine vinegar mostly whereas French dressing is much richer with yoghurt, and Dijon mustard added to the herbs. 

So naturally, everyone wanted to try making their own salad dressings and dips with the herbs from our garden. Some of our more conscientious members even went on-line to look for classic recipes to use as reference for their own experiments while the free-spirited ones simply winged it, but a lot of very delicious herb dips and salad dressings were discovered (and tasted!) We'll be collecting the easiest and quickest ones to share with everybody at one of our upcoming Saturday activity demonstrations, naturally.

Don't forget to like our Facebook page or check back here at our blog for more information, updates and announcements about our new activities!


*Tip - Look for Friends of the Botani Gardens Society at Facebook!