Fabriculture

Fabriculture Discover - Educate - Inspire! We want to teach kids about Australian wildlife!

Based in the Scenic Rim, Queensland all our products are australian made and owned. Designed by Creative Director and twin mama Penny Gale, and researched collaborating with scientists, our flashcards are also professionally edited. Through teaching kids about our native species, you can foster a love of our natural heritage, inspiring the next generation to preserve it, with the added benefit of

teaching literacy through open ended play. All my products are made in Australia using other local, family owned businesses.
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06/06/2026

🥰Happy World Environment Day!🌿To celebrate I've created a free fortune teller packed with wildlife facts. Please excuse ...
05/06/2026

🥰Happy World Environment Day!🌿
To celebrate I've created a free fortune teller packed with wildlife facts. Please excuse my wrinkly hands in the photo!

Head to the website to download the Fortune Teller which has 8 fascinating animal facts about Australia's native species.🐨

It's easy to print, fold and play, this educational activity helps spark curiosity about nature and inspire the next generation of wildlife champions.
👇🏼
https://www.fabriculture.com.au/shop/p/fortune-teller-free-download-wildlife

Exactly why I started!
28/05/2026

Exactly why I started!

As invasive species become normalised in everyday life, many native animals are fading not only from our landscapes, but from public consciousness altogether 😢

Our Media and Comms Manager, Nicola Barton, penned an opinion piece in The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age this week exploring a growing disconnect between Australians and the wildlife disappearing around us.

Full text:

Australia’s extinction crisis doesn’t begin when the last animal dies. It begins much earlier – when people stop noticing what’s missing.

This occurred to me at a barbecue recently when I mentioned quolls in conversation and was met with blank stares around the table. Not one person knew what they were. Think about that for a moment.

Quolls are among Australia’s most remarkable native predators. These spotted marsupials, found nowhere else on Earth, have become so absent from our national consciousness that many Australians no longer even know they exist.

A few days after the barbecue, a friend shared a photo in our group chat of a fox wandering through her backyard. Another responded simply: “So cute!”

I haven’t stopped thinking about that contrast. In many ways, those two moments captured Australia’s extinction crisis perfectly.

We are living through a bizarre cultural amnesia where invasive predators are normalised, even adored as in this case, while the native species they help drive towards extinction disappear so completely we forget their names altogether. In fact, a 2020 survey found that almost one in five Australians believed foxes were native to Australia. And honestly, who could blame them?

Most Australians are never taught about invasive species in any meaningful way. We grow up celebrating gum trees, kangaroos and the bush, but rarely understand the things reshaping the places beneath our feet.

Foxes and cats kill billions of native animals every year. Deer trample bushland and pollute waterways. Rabbits strip landscapes bare. Weeds choke native trees and cause more ferocious bushfires. The crisis is everywhere, yet invisible to so many.

That invisibility is politically convenient. When people don’t understand the scale of the problem, governments can continue treating nature protection like a niche issue, instead of the national emergency it is. Funding gets cut, programs limp along in short-term cycles and environmental biosecurity is perpetually underfunded.

Australia already has one of the worst animal extinction records on Earth, and invasive species are the leading driver of those losses.

Some species are no longer seen. Certain sounds are no longer heard. And eventually, particular names are no longer recognised.

People in Sydney will probably remember the extinction of the monorail more than they will the extinction of the eastern quoll from the Australian mainland, but it was not that long ago that they were commonly found across Sydney. The last ever wild eastern quoll officially recorded on the mainland was found as roadkill in Vaucluse in 1963. That is a moment in Sydney’s history we should remember.

Instead, “quoll”, for many, has been reduced to a word you’d need to check the answers for when doing a crossword puzzle. This is the legacy we risk leaving the next generation: erasure.

Because once people stop recognising a species, protecting it becomes infinitely harder.

This crisis fundamentally clashes with how we as Australians see ourselves. We tell ourselves we are outdoor people. We celebrate uniquely Australian wildlife as part of our national identity. We pride ourselves on our connection to the bush, the beach, the weekend camping trip and the local walking track.

But increasingly, many of us see green and assume nature is healthy – not realising our local bushland may be choking under a blanket of invasive weeds, suffocating the native plants and displacing the animals that belong there.

It is this disconnection from our ecological reality that is the gradual unmaking of Australia.

Perhaps that is the most dangerous thing about invasive species in this country. They reshape what feels normal – and they lower the bar of what we expect nature to look like.

Australians once knew what it meant to lose the Tasmanian tiger. Today, many could walk past a quoll without knowing what it is. That should alarm us far more than it does.

‘Education is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire’ 👇🏻This is why all my gifts and resources start with ...
24/05/2026

‘Education is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire’ 👇🏻
This is why all my gifts and resources start with joyful play but always with learning as the foundation. 🥰
Great for early education.❤️

🤔How do we protect biodiversity for the future?It starts with connection.At Fabriculture, educational design, illustrati...
22/05/2026

🤔How do we protect biodiversity for the future?
It starts with connection.

At Fabriculture, educational design, illustration and play-based learning tools to help children and families engage with Australia’s unique and threatened species in meaningful ways.

🌿This year’s International Biodiversity Day theme “Acting locally for global impact” reflects the idea that small, community-driven actions can contribute to broader environmental change.

By encouraging curiosity, conversation and awareness around biodiversity, we hope to help nurture the next generation of environmental caretakers.🐨

🍯Without bees we’re screwed. They are vital for our ecosystems and food supply.  Breakfast would be a disaster without t...
20/05/2026

🍯Without bees we’re screwed. They are vital for our ecosystems and food supply. Breakfast would be a disaster without them.

This is why pretty much everything I create has bees somewhere within it – in fact every flashcard has a bee hiding somewhere! [and yes most likely drowning on the loggerhead turtle card]

We have over 2000 has types of native bee and at least 500 have not bee-n named.
Hence my gratitude greeting card is swarming.
Say thank you to a bee to celebrate World Bee Day! Honestly it’s the least you can do.🐝

Australia’s black cockatoos are basically nature’s storm warning system 🌧️🖤There are five species of black cockatoo acro...
14/05/2026

Australia’s black cockatoos are basically nature’s storm warning system 🌧️🖤

There are five species of black cockatoo across Australia, recognised by their striking black feathers and flashes of red, yellow or white in their tails. However, four out of five species are now under threat nationally.

Known in Indigenous knowledge and Australian folklore as “rain birds” or “storm birds”, black cockatoos are famous for their loud calls and dramatic movements before wet weather arrives.
See them flying from the hills to the coast? Rain could be on the way ☁️

🖤 Which black cockatoo species have you seen in the wild?

  to a little wip - lizard commission I did as a sweet birthday gift 🦎Special birthday coming up?
14/05/2026

to a little wip - lizard commission I did as a sweet birthday gift 🦎
Special birthday coming up?

I heard sirens this morning when I was out walking…. Then my boys yelling… I started walking back to house and they ran ...
09/02/2026

I heard sirens this morning when I was out walking…. Then my boys yelling… I started walking back to house and they ran down to meet me.. ‘Mum mum! We heard sirens and thought you’d had an accident… OR BEEN ARRESTED!🤷🏼‍♀️🤦🏼‍♀️

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Mount Tamborine, QLD

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