
A blog to track the progress of a unique bonsai project, an attempt to create a living display of the world's hottest pepper, the Carolina Reaper. Combining the imagery of the iconic Grim Reaper's skull with the age old Root Over Rock bonsai technique, we shall attempt to create a living representation of death.
Showing posts with label Driftwood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Driftwood. Show all posts
Friday, December 5, 2014
Containment Status: 98%
And I think we're mostly done with the container, ladies and gentlemen. Everything has dried and been sealed with a gloss enamel (including the moss), the facing has been decided on (ended up being obvious after I realized it had a facing that was more or less flat and attractive), and even the skull burial depth after realizing how much soil depth was available to work with. This skull bonsai container is ready to rock!
I do have one final thing I want to do with it though. There is a nice fairly flat overall area in the front at the bottom that would be perfect for a nameplate. going to head over to the local plaque store and see how much it would cost me to get a nice looking brass nameplate with the name of the project and the type of pepper I'll be using to affix to the front.
In the mean time, enjoy this pencil sketch I found on the internet (no clue where it originated from) that shows the basic idea I'm going for.
Monday, December 1, 2014
Impatience
I am entirely too impatient. Odd for someone that likes doing bonsai, but hey, thats why I do bonchi with fast growing peppers instead of spending 10 years for an actual tree.
I just had to pull out the moss and do a quick mock up. This is so going to work.
Frankly, I'd be out there spraying sealant on the wood right now if it wasn't raining. Gotta remember to try spraying it on some test moss. See how it looks, see if it hardens it up to make it a little more durable.
I just had to pull out the moss and do a quick mock up. This is so going to work.
Frankly, I'd be out there spraying sealant on the wood right now if it wasn't raining. Gotta remember to try spraying it on some test moss. See how it looks, see if it hardens it up to make it a little more durable.
Saturday, November 29, 2014
A Bowl Is Fine Too
One of the most important skills to learn when you're a maker is to look for what things could be, instead of what they currently are. Thats not always easy to get into, because you have to learn to ignore whatever it is someone else is telling you an item is, and look at shapes, textures, etc to see what you could turn it into.
Today I was doing some post Black Friday shopping, seeing if I could find any good containers pre-made and ready to go that I could us for this project (among other things), but even at the biggest place in town I couldn't really find anything that suited my, ahem, "unique" requirements. And this place has thousands of different containers.
So, I decided to stop by one of my favorite haunts, the local salvage yard. You never know what they're going to have, and today I got lucky. Big stained teak wood bowls, and a string of driftwood/wood knots/etc. They're the perfect things I need to make the base container for a forest theme!
Today I was doing some post Black Friday shopping, seeing if I could find any good containers pre-made and ready to go that I could us for this project (among other things), but even at the biggest place in town I couldn't really find anything that suited my, ahem, "unique" requirements. And this place has thousands of different containers.
So, I decided to stop by one of my favorite haunts, the local salvage yard. You never know what they're going to have, and today I got lucky. Big stained teak wood bowls, and a string of driftwood/wood knots/etc. They're the perfect things I need to make the base container for a forest theme!
Plus, it kinda looks like the Millennium Falcon!
Now, like anything this has it's ups and it's downs. On the up side, this is a very nice looking piece of raw-ish looking wood that just looks very nice. The downside however is that it isn't really that deep. Its less of a bowl and more of an overly deep serving platter. Another downside is that it being sold as a bowl means it has zero drainage.
The drainage problem is the easy part, a few minutes with a power drill will solve that, and some polyurethane sealant over the drill holes to seal them back up will keep the holes from rotting out once we start putting moist soil in it. The other problem is that its not really deep enough to hold enough soil for me. So, thats where those driftwood chunks come in.
Picking out several well shaped pieces of wood and tacking them together with some wood glue, I can form a ring around the top of the bowl.
And once the wood glue spots completely harden, it should be firm enough that I can lift the ring up, glue it together from underneath, and seal it all with polyurethane, doubling the depth of this new planter to be.
Another thing I picked up for this was some bathroom tile. Yes, bathroom tile.
This stuff was all of 87 cents a tile, which might be murder if I was doing a bathroom, but for this one pack is more than enough. All I have to do is break it and I'll have very nice looking stone shards I can use to brick up gaps in the wood ring, create some slate like stone features, or whatever else I need a to break up the all wood texture I currently have going on.
Then once I've got everything the way I want it, I can do a final coating on the inside with something like cement to plug up any remaining holes, and my base container will be complete. Then, it'll be time to decorate it. They sell very nice looking dried mosses as flocking for model trains and the like, I'll grab some of that to cover some of the boring flat areas of the bowl, and into some of the crevices of the driftwood to help hide my joins.
With any luck, I'll end up with a container that looks like it came right off the forest floor.
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