MosaicSmith Blog

Showing posts with label recycled. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycled. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Who Recycled, a Glass Mosaic Owl Portrait



'Who Recycled'
Scroll down to see construction slide-show
I recently completed this 6" x 6" framed glass mosaic for Lin Schorr's Sept 2012 Auction benefiting Doctor's Without Border's.
www.flickr.com/photos/linlee8/6260969290/in/set-721576279...
The frame inspired this piece and was found at a local fundraising sale. It likely was a sample frame for a frame shop.
The owl is from a photo I took of the one who lives at the Florida Aquarium in Tampa. The pose and texture went nicely with the frame.
Continuing the recycled theme, the substrate is from a piece of scrap hardibacker concrete board that otherwise might have been thrown away. The owl glass is all from little scrap bits and the background is nipped from wine bottles.


To see slideshows from other mosaic projects, click 'Slideshow' in label cloud in right margin.

Although the original "Who Recycled" has sold, a print is available on my page at Fine Art America:
http://fineartamerica.com/artists/19+linda+smith

All available mosaic art: https://www.etsy.com/shop/MosaicSmith?search_query=mosaic+art

I make sterling silver jewelry too!!  http://MosaicSmith.com https://mosaicsmith.etsy.com

Friday, January 28, 2011

How To Make Concrete Mosaic Garden Art Ball

You can make very fun garden art using found objects and scrap glass.

This post details how I made the garden ball pictured above, using a glass globe from an old pendant light fixture. You likely don't have one of those handy :) , but a little thinking outside the box and you can come up with other unique 'molds' to make bases for your own personalized garden art.

First- some general supplies:
  • Some sort of 'mold'. Ideas- glass bottles, plastic containers such as milk bottles, takeout food containers... IMPORTANT: If you use a plastic form, you must have an opening wide enough for the cured concrete to be removed through. For milk jugs, cut off the entire top before adding concrete mix. The opening needs to be as wide as the widest part of your shape.
  • concrete mix
  • eye protection!, hammer, prying tools
  • glass nippers
  • scrap stained glass- often local stained glass shops will sell scrap by the pound or ebay and etsy both often will have listings for scrap.
  • thin set mortar
  • grout
Before adding concrete mix, I lightly coated the inside of the shape with a mold release- Vaseline but cooking spray will work in a pinch.

Add concrete mix slowly and tap occasionally (with your hand!) to raise air pockets. Don't want to break that glass yet! If your shape includes thinner sections, you will want to reinforce them with hardware cloth sections embedded in the center. See my stepping stone instructions.

If you use a plastic form, you can unmold, carefully, usually after one day.

If you use glass, WAIT a minimum of 10 days for the concrete to cure before breaking glass. Full cure is at 30 days.







Be sure to wear eye protection when breaking the glass off! I used both the hammer and the knob end of a glass scorer to break the glass in sections. Old dental tools and flat blade screwdrivers worked well to pry off sections.

Now that you have your blank concrete 'canvas', have fun creating!! I used the glass I removed to make the white flowers on my garden ball. They were especially pleasing to work with because the glass was curved and fit nicely back on the ball. I used thin set mortar to attach my glass. This is a weather friendly glue though if you live in a freeze zone, mosaic art lasts longer if brought inside in winter.

For adding flat glass to curved sections, smaller pieces fit around the curves better- and are less hazardous! Use extreme care when handling your piece as there will likely be sharp exposed points and edges. Grouting will minimize this.


 

I don't just play with concrete!! 

I create original design silver jewelry too!! 
https://www.mosaicsmith.com/collections/all   or
https://mosaicsmith.etsy.com

Monday, May 19, 2008

R Cubed

As in reduce, reuse and recycle.

My studio is in our garage due to space and safety issues (flying glass bits from nipping shapes) and shares space with normal garage items (also due to space issues), including our recycling bins. So that visual inspiration, combined with my innate thriftiness, combined with my brain still kicking around an exact plan for my egret (see previous post), brought my mosaic muse to create this little mosaic.

I took step by step photos:













All the tesserae for this mosaic are recycled.


  • I used an aluminum can bottom for the flower center and folded strips of aluminum can for the flower stem (Any guesses on what was originally in that can?).

  • The aluminum rectangle is a castoff from my husband's project and the '3' is made from leftover stainless steel picture wire.

  • The white glass for the flower and blue/plum glass are leftover bits saved from other mosaics.

  • The green glass was a wine bottle and the brown glass in the flower center was previously a beer bottle neck. I like the way the tight curve adds dimension.

  • Neighbors added contributions also by donating mirror and the textured amber background glass after remodeling projects.

The first step in grouting is always a bit of a concern, but after a bit of sponging comes the big reveal.