In 2016, Harper’s Magazine published a list of 23 objects which have been mistaken for guns by police officers during the shooting of unarmed civilians since 2001. The majority of those assaulted were Black men – none of them were armed. Upon seeing this list, multimedia artist Cara Levine began carving wooden replicas of these items – a sandwich, a wrench, a hairbrush, a bible, etc. – as an act of remembrance and reflection. These replicas would go on to comprise the first exhibition for the art project This Is Not A Gun. Since then, the project has evolved to include public workshops hosted by artists, activists, and mindfulness collaborators, in which participants mold objects that have been mistaken for guns out of clay and hold safe and supportive conversations about issues like racial profiling, police brutality, and societal trauma. This Is Not A Gun offers a digital toolkit for communities interested in hosting their own workshop in hopes of creating spaces for these dialogues, catalyzed by art making.