Thursday, November 28, 2019

Fire--in progress

June-August '19. I spent a good section of my stained glass class on this.

Planning out how the flames would go with a pseudo-pattern

Gluing in the lights

Looking good!

This photo was taken so I would remember where all the pieces went.

I wash the numbers off as I glue them down.

Monday, November 25, 2019

Green snake--in progress

Green snake! The theme of this one is celebrating your flaws. February '19-ish.

Monday, November 18, 2019

Pangolin--in progress

This is supposed to be another variation on a fire nightlight, but my mother dubbed it a pangolin for reasons unknown and it's just become easier to call it that. It's balanced on a paint bottle. February-May '19ish.


Thursday, November 14, 2019

River nightlight--in progress

August '19.
Allegra: I'm using the fire as a nightlight. I keep having to change the batteries though.
Me: What do you want for a new one
A: My favorite color is blue.
I cannibalized a blue vase for the glass, painted it and the wood, and ran Christmas lights through it.
The glass

The wood--prettiest thing I ever painted

Finally bought myself a ratchet/clamp, coming in handy here

Close-up of how they fit together

Used the rest of the lights for leaves on a tree. Painted the edges of the glass to make them safe.

Monday, November 11, 2019

"Trophy"

The idea behind this one is that it used to be beautiful, and then someone killed it and stuck it up on a plaque, most of the scales sloughed off, silver blood still staining them.
FINALLY hanging on the wall

Detail of the glass work

Monday, November 4, 2019

"Trophy" in progress

Started in ~February '19, completed in September of the same year. This sucker was difficult. I painted it and glued down the pieces with the intent to solder the seams, learned how to solder, and pulled them all up. Then I wrapped them all with foil (took me about 3 episodes of Supernatural), glued them to a piece of foil wrapped around the wood so they'd keep their shape as I soldered, and actually did the soldering. Then I pulled it off the foil so I could tin the edges, stuck it on the wood, melted the seams until it took the shape it had somehow got out of, and glued it down. Whew. Then just to mount to the wood and stain the wood (yes I know, should have done it the other way around, I was having trouble with the stain and didn't think it was going to happen). And of course initial it.

Original work--all of this had to be redone

Solder job!

Attached

Woodburned initials!
Next week, the finished product.