Thursday, February 7, 2019

miniature screen door

I woke up way too early again Wednesday morning.  I was up at 3:45 am putting a movie in the dvd player at my work station and making a tiny deer antler.  The thought crossed my mind to make a screen door for my room box but was quickly kicked out because I couldn't think of anything I could use for the screen.  Later in the morning I was cleaning out my cabinets in the laundry room and I found a piece of a plastic mesh bag from some garlic that I ordered for the garden several years ago that I kept for instructional purposes.  I tossed it in the trash bag then my eyes did that "thing" they do when a miniature is made in seconds in my imagination from something that is trash.  It's kind of a frozen-in-time-eyes-cut-to-the-right-far-off-and-away-brows-narrowed-to-a-straight-line-look.  I love inspiration.  Here's semi-steps to what I made.  It took most of the afternoon simply because of glue and paint drying.  Love you!!!

Supplies, minus the paint and exacto knife.  My favorite glue to use for everything, measurements, balsa wood, Cracker Barrel carved toothpicks, fingernail file, and the plastic mesh bag piece I found.

Aren't these fantastic?!?!

I used my exacto knife to trim the detail off the tops of the toothpicks.  A couple of them were launched in the air when they snapped off till I figured out a way to avoid that.  They're probably under the stove right now :)

So apparently, in my trance, I didn't take pictures of the wood cutting and sanding steps (or painting).  I found sizes for a normal sized screen door on pinterest and divided the measurements by 12 to get to 1/12" scale.  My measurements got kicked out of the water a bit because 1. I have a crappy ruler, 2. I can't follow my own directions & 3. I like to use scrap pieces of wood from my stash and make-do.  4th child syndrome :)

The thing I like about the wood glue is that it adheres pretty quick and I can scoot my project so it doesn't stick to what I have it drying on.  My fingers are covered in drying glue at this point.

Painted plastic mesh.  Better than I thought it would be.

I had to cut it into two pieces to cover.  The bag had sat for so long stapled to the label that it had a folded mar.  I had to glue in steps and hold it down to flatten it out.  It didn't really flatten out but the beauty of finished products (and not getting discouraged) is that you don't really notice at the end.

I wound up cutting strips of extremely thin balsa wood to cover the screen on the back of the door.  I was afraid it would start letting go over time.

I was a little stumped on the door handle.  I went through beads and cardstock ideas and settled on cutting one more spindle from the toothpicks, painting it and gluing it on two seed beads for a pull handle.  I like it a lot.

 Progress mess (actually cleaned up somewhat) cause the door is finished at this point.  Tiny projects = huge mess!

I've skipped the entire painting process :(…

So I tried to crackle paint for the first time.  It semi-worked.  I first painted the door (before the screen was glued in) with white craft paint.  Then covered it with cheap white glue and painted gray craft paint over the glue while it was still wet.  It crackled a little but not like I had hoped.  I then went over some edges lightly with watered down black paint.  I used sawdust that I colored with a drop of green craft paint and a drop of water for the moss and decayed look.  Forgive me for no pictures?

I whipped up a clay circle and baked it, covered it with scraps of material and lace, moss and a primitive star that I aged and tied it to the top.  I like it but I wished I had a primitive heart to go on it for Valentine's Day.


Mid-Set-Up.  I made everything here except for the cloche, window and flowers.  I do love the little window because I can change out the scenes by just printing a picture and taping it behind it.


 I'm in love!



3 comments:

  1. Awesome job, I love it. I've been trying to decide how to make a 3d screen door for a journal cover and will definitely use some of your inspiration, thanks

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