Randy Sarafan defies easy description. He’s clearly a polymath of some sort, a provocateur
Mr. Sarafan has posted a recipe for a simple chalkboard-surfaced table on the outstanding and ever-useful Instructables.com.
While Sarafan’s design assumes Ikea trestles, this can be managed with sawhorses, or leaned against or mounted on a wall.The only indispensable items are chalkboard paint, a relatively smooth surface (Sarafan’s table was made of MDF) and chalk.
The point is that, with inexpensive, easily available materials, it’s possible to create a graphic representation of, for instance, a neighborhood – for planning purposes – or even in the midst of a crisis. While rolls of butcher paper are also available quickly, they’re not easily erased as revisions and updates are required. There are, of course, more sophisticated variations: magnetic white boards permit the use of objects and markers (for streets, vehicles, people); acetate overlays over maps permit drawing with grease pencils; GIS applications permit much more nuanced data manipulation.
But this will work-
and can be seen and worked on by more than one person at once – without electricity, without much more than a smooth surface, chalkboard paint, and chalk.
We’ll try to post some other variations on simple “sand-table” solutions in the near future.
Paint
Rustoleum makes chalkboard paint in brush-on and spray versions; it’s my guess that the fastest construction would involve spray paint or canned paint using a roller to create a thinner, quicker-drying coat. Rustoleum suggests 24 hours for drying. A hair dryer might work to accelerate the drying process.(Rustoleum’s spray-on version comes only in black; the brush-on version, in black or green).
Dick Blick carries Krylon chalkboard paint in green and black (spray, $4.99 12 ounces)), black only (regular can, $11.99 29 ounces)
Craft At Home has a recipe for making your own chalkboard paint from acrylic paint, glazing medium and tile grout. via Lifehacker.
See also:
Sand Table and Modeling: Supplies and resources
- (To be more precise, many of “Laszlo Toth’s” letters were, in fact, answered [↩]
- Bob Garfield interviews Don Novello about the Laszlo Letters on the WNYC show On The Media [↩]




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