Showing posts with label bohemian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bohemian. Show all posts

Friday, August 24, 2012

The Cottage Mermaids Haven


in the beginning this was basically a tear-down but through all the following steps we rebuilt it into a painting studio and then into a cottage










 

 




  









click here for the  SEQUENCE of how we created the front entrance.. step by step  


The cottage has been sold.

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 The famous St. Martins Sea Caves carved by the Fundy tides... easily reached  at low tide

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photographs by   Gwen Buchanan,  DESIDERATUM Art Jewelry and Paintings
all Oil Paintings on display in the House are done by my partner, John Ackerson

Saturday, March 03, 2012

How to Make A Headboard

Bohemian Headboard ... Medieval influenced


....from things you may have laying around the garage...

First you get that old door you have been saving 
that didn't fit any of your doorways and it is too nice to cut up.. so there must be another use for it..  and you were sure it would come in handy sometime... well now is the time.
...this is a 5 panel.. not sure of the age ... but it is old and it has an aged hand applied grain so it is special to me cause someone already spent a lot of time on  it before someone else threw it away.. 

It helps if it is the same size as your mattress.... or you can trim it on either end if need be.






Then you gather all your leftover thick gauge sheet steel...
we used 2 ga. which is about 1/3 " thick...
(what? ... oh... come now, everybody has sheet steel cluttering up the place, right?) that has  rusted and seen better days from lying behind the barn for years...
 gather up some big old heavy nuts and bolts... and grab your drill with the oversize drill bit .
..just leave any patterns formed by neglect on the surface of the metal.. 
it makes it more interesting and tells a story of the life it has had and where it has been.








.. you will also need to cut the steel into shapes you find appealing.. we like this gothic arch shape.. 
 and make sure they are spaced so the design  fits all the way across the door/headboard to be...
 we used an oxy-acetylene torch for cutting the steel... leaving a slightly uneven edge
 then a hand-grinder to smooth and buff up the edges for contrast... 
this steel had originally been black so the shine around the edges really emphasized the shape.






...maybe you also have some old angle iron (this is 3") to use for the the corner posts.. that is nice and sturdy ...  
and maybe some parts off an old haycutting machine... never know what is out behind the barn..
of course some folks may think this makes the headboard look more like a torture devise 
but we'll pretend they represent little decorative spindles...
  I really like the combination of these diverse gathered materials.






... put a coat or two of varnish on the steel so the rust doesn't come off on the bedcoverings or you...
clamp on a couple lights because now there is something to lean on to comfortably read your books

and Voila... 

you have a Headboard of some unusualness that will stand the test of time.. and you have cleaned up your garage and behind the barn at the same time...






...Sweet Dreams...







This is a link to a Carved Headboard that I made a long time ago.


Wednesday, March 02, 2011

Texture




The character of surfaces ...
 elements transformed by time or manipulation...

flocked and gathered, gauzy fabric discovered in the ends-bin at a favourite fabric shop... 

an aged, rough, thick, salvaged  floor plank, now cut with a scalloped edge,
 serving  its second life as
the strength giver in an east facing  window seat in a corner of an upstairs room...   
the coolness and durability of  leather surrounded by fur and fleece...

...the interrelation of these elements stimulate the senses...
their surfaces draw one to touch... to linger... to feel... with  eyes, fingers and imagination..
abstract is real...   visually tactile...  satisfying on a gut level...

 discovering, assembling and working with these mostly found materials was exciting...
and when I have a chance to sit here, it makes me feel good.... and I remember the "Process",
my favourite part of creating.


 ...my Best to you All....


.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Drilling Marble




The sink top that this little yellow chrysanthemum is sitting on waited a long time for its second life....  it feels so smooth and the veining so beautiful... we were determined to figure out how we would make it work...


..click pictures  to ENLARGE...




The most frustrating thing about it all was that everyone we asked didn't know anything about drilling marble and couldn't help us at all.. .. it is a shame that the knowledge of the past is disappearing .. we checked in books and online and decided we might as well try it ourselves and give it a shot since we had the old marble top anyway and if we could get it to work for us it was worth a try...

Our biggest fear was that it would crack... but now after finding how easy it was to drill  we would not be nervous again.. as long as not much pressure is applied and we just go slowly and let the drill do the work.. We used a hole cutter for ceramic with diamond grit on the end... these pictures start when we were beginning to drill the third hole... the drill bit has to be constantly cooled  so my job was directing the flow of the water, just a trickle, the easiest part... although the drilling  was not difficult at all,  just needed a slow gentle hand..

... the marble was heavy and so thick...  1 1/2" (you can see the marble plugs we cut out sitting on top of the sink in a couple of the pictures) ...that the drill would not go all the way through... we turned it sideways, shone a light through the cut side and the spot showed through its translucency.. we traced the circle, flipped the slab, laid it down and began drilling from the back... we did this for each hole... the last one popped out... the white slurry that was created by the drilling was very dense and fine and felt so smooth on the fingertips.  makes me wonder what it could be used for.. I'm sure someone has already thought of something to make from it...

 ...we also had to drill 4 small holes on the back to hold the clamp attachments to secure the undermount porcelain sink in place...  I never got pictures of that...  they were held in place with a heavy-duty epoxy, which we had to try a couple kinds to get one that worked... no one knew what to recommend for that either..  but we know now...
 


  

For quite a while, we had saved some old hardwood staircase spindles in the garage for a reason, we knew not what.. til now... and decided they could possibly work for the front leg supports for the sink... but they were too short, since we wanted the marble top to be about 36" high... we took a couple more spindles and cut them at spots where the turnings were appropriate... John drilled into each end and glued and fitted them together with dowels...... 2 legs just the right length...  and kind of special too, I think...  as we looked carefully at each of the spindles, there were subtle nuances observable so it is a fact that each one of them had been hand-turned in their beginning.





... we used some true 1" thick, 100 year old, salvaged, maple, nice and dry, stair-tread for the apron..  because we had it and it was good stuff...   intricate patterns can be cut from it and it is still strong...   John used a drill and a jigsaw to create the pattern in the wood ... then attached the legs and put in corner braces just behind them...



                                                                                                      ...at the studio...


here it is attached to the wall, where he had previously put a 2" x 6"  at the given height...  and began putting all the pieces together...


... little chrome circles were attached over the old square holes on either side ...
.... at a monument shop in nearby Sussex we were able to find a small leftover piece of limestone (since they didn't have any marble) from when they used to make kitchen counter tops, that seemed to be complimentary to our old marble, to use as a back-splash.. not exactly the same but that's ok... the whole assemblage is made of parts from hither and yon anyway and that's fine with us.. We like living a Bohemian Life...




Moral of story..........  Drilling marble is not as hard as Marble......

or......  If you decide you want to do something... just keep on doing it till you're done.