Showing posts with label the dolls' house magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the dolls' house magazine. Show all posts

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Additional Stuff: Ikebana Using Various Plants

May 29th - June 13th 2015

Ikebana is the Japanese art of flower arranging.  Of course it is quite old and has traditional compositions and content but for simplicity’s sake, I will create a free style or Jiyūka design.  I figured I’d use some of the “flowers” I had bought at the beginning of this project and just dye them pinkish since I wanted to try and make sakura branches.  The flowers already had a slight purple hue so bringing them to pink was no big deal.  I then laid them out to dry so I could work with them.
Dying and drying the petals.
I wanted to have two kinds of cherry blossoms in the ikebana vase.  One from Georgie Steeds Miniature Garden Centre kit and one using the tutorial by Marianne Cook from the March 2015 issue of The Dolls’ House Magazine (the one with my ryokan feature).  I thought the tutorial was really very nice and wanted to give it a try.  The first part was easy dipping the florist’s wire into some red paint but the next part was a bit more exasperating.  You have to cut some small threads and glue them to each stamen.  But there was no way I was going to be able to be super precise and get the bottom part of the threads to match up with the underside of the red painted bulb.  So I just glued them on as best I could, let them dry and then cleaned them up a bit.  Once dried, I trimmed them down, then dabbed more red paint on each pink thread as well as the stem and let them dry.  Next was to punch a hole in the center of each flower and thread them onto the stem.  Sometimes I punched the hole (with a needle) too close to an edge and the petal blossom split while I slid it up the stem.  So I’m glad I made a bunch of flowers.  Once that was done, more drying time.
Dipping the tips in red acrylic.
Cutting the stamens
Gluing the stamens
Finished stamens before trimming.
After adding the flower and trimming the stamens.
Next was making the sepal (underside petal) for each flower.  Since I didn’t have a puncher, I had to take the flowers I had and just trim them into star shapes.  I then painted them deep red.  I did check and this part of the flower on a pink cherry blossom is quite red.  So I did the same.  After letting them dry I shaped them pressing a toothpick in the center and then piercing them to make the hole so I could insert them onto the stem.  A dab of glue and the sepals were in place.  I liked the final effect.
Trimming the stars to size.

Finished blossome with the sepals
Next up was fashioning some branches.  It was a bit difficult as my hands are not very steady but I managed two branches by wrapping different gauge wires around a thicker one.  I added some dots of glue at the joints and let them dry.  Next was just to paint them brown and let that dry too.  Then I added the blossoms around the branches.  I had only made 16 blossoms so I decided to use this branch as the full pink blossom and then make another with just white ones.  I then added some green leaves leftover from the plastic plants I used in the back of the house.  I painted them a little red and varnished them with a little shine since that’s the kind of leaf I found pictured on the net (at least with pinkish blossoms).  I can’t really complain about the final result.
Final result pink cherry blossoms on a branch.
Next up was the cherry blossom kit I got from Miniature Garden Centre.  These blossoms were really quite small but still, given the small scale of the house, they would give a perfect overall look.  First I painted the “branches”.  I painted two black as I had seen a really nice arrangement with pink petals on a black painted branch.  So I wanted to try that.  Then I just formed each petal (using a mousepad and pressing a toothpick into the center) and glued each one onto a branch.  After drying, I put a dot of glue on the inside of each blossom and sprinkled them with the yellow “pollen” dust.  They’re perfect!
Gluing the blossoms on the branch.
You can see the finished cherry blossoms on the right and beginning the centers for the white flowers.
While those were drying etc., I started work on the last set of blossoms.  These ones are white so I painted some petals white and let them dry.  I then dipped the tips of some #30 gauge wire into glue a few times to form a round top, then into yellow acrylic, and finally into a more liquid glue solution and the yellow pollen.  These will be the centers of my flowers.  Once dry, I pressed the petals into shape (two per blossom) and slid them up the stem gluing them into place.  Next up was to make the sepal.  From what I could see, they are green for white blossoms.  I managed to locate a star punch (!) even if it was too big for mini flowers it proved useful.  All I had to do was to trim each of the stars more or less to size.  I realized tho that the flowers looked less and less like cherry blossoms.  But really that was ok with me.  They still looked convincing as far as flowers go.
Once the sepals were glued in, I attached the flowers to its branch.  Then I made some twisted bamboo pieces and placed all the elements into the tall vases on the top floor hallway (plus a few cherry blossom branches in the squat vase on the first floor).  I made a few long leaves using the green sushi grass and the ikebana vases were done.  I think it adds to the final effect in the hallways and fills out those oversized vases pretty well.

Cutting out and trimming the star shapes.
Gluing the flowers onto their branch.
Finishing the branch.
Ikebana vases. 
Two larger vases with the blossoms in place.
And another element is finished.
Left side Ikebana arrangement.

Finished right side vase.

Friday, February 6, 2015

The Dolls' House Magazine March 2015 Issue

February 6th 2015

Hello all!

Apologies for not having blogged in a while.  Full sized life took over for the past few months and I've been unable to partake in my mini hobby.  Not to say that the ryokan house is complete (I wonder if it ever will be) but it's without a doubt nearing the final phases.

As per the previous blog posts, I added the roof and made the ryokan sign which was the final chapter of the kit.  I still have a few things I want to build and add to the back of the house but I have only just returned from the States having spent some time with my Mom.  She was recently diagnosed with a terminal illness and has gone through all manner of hell just trying to maintain some semblance of normalcy.  I am very happy that I was able to spend time with her and my Dad and help them transition a little into their new reality.  The roller coaster isn't over yet.  And there will be many more painful moments.  I am sad I cannot be physically closer to them and my siblings.  It's not easy being so distant.  Wishing that someone had invented a Star Trek transporter.  Then I could split my time between my family in the States and my husband and son here.

In any case, I was contacted last November by The Dolls' House Magazine as they wanted to do a little photo op and write up on the ryokan house.  I have yet to see the magazine (perhaps it will arrive soon) but given that the Buddha Room actually made the cover I am hopeful that the write up and the photos did the ryokan justice.  I was actually really surprised that it made the cover.  I still see so many errors on the construction but I have to remind myself....it is the first time I've actually built a project of this kind.  I've learned so much! And it has been a fantastic journey.

I think I will be sad when it's finished...sitting up here in my cold attic room.  I can't move it anywhere else right now.  So the next project just won't be so big!! Of course I already have another project in mind.  I've been holding off so I wouldn't neglect the completion of the ryokan.  But I can see the day coming when I will tackle something new.  Hopefully it will be as challenging as this project has been.

Thanks all for following the construction and hope you will check out the magazine too!

As usual, onwards and upwards (because you can't go backwards).