Tampilkan postingan dengan label Broken China Mosaic. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Broken China Mosaic. Tampilkan semua postingan

Kamis, 15 Maret 2012

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Broken China Mosaic Chair Project

Broken China Mosaic Chair Project 

Hi friends! Here is something different for today: I was one of eight local Lehigh Valley artists who was given a chair to transform into a piece of artwork. The finished art chairs will be auctioned off to benefit the Allentown Freak Out Fringe Festival, which is a annual festival of avant-garde entertainment. (This year's festival will be held in downtown Allentown, Pennsylvania on June 22 & 23, 2012)

I did my chair in the style of a folk art memory jug, using all vintage and antique shards of broken china plates, cups, saucers, etc.
Many of the shards I used in this piece are well over one hundred years old. A few of them were hand picked from the shores of the Themes River, remnants washed ashore from the Staffordshire pottery factories that once operated along the riverbanks there.



Detail of back rest



 Detail of seat



My completed art chair

The theme of my chair is "Half Life"
Half life is a scientific term that means the period of time it takes for the amount of a substance undergoing decay to decrease by half. 

Because I used all salvaged and recycled elements in my chair, I had hoped that I could also send a small environmental message and maybe raise a little bit of awareness about how long it takes some materials in landfills to break down...hopefully helping people who are unaware, realize how important it is to recycle. Take a look at these decomposition rates...


Landfill decomposition rates:

Milk carton: 5 years

Plastic milk jug: 500 years

Aluminum can: 80 to 200 years

Plastic drinking bottles: hundreds of years

 Plastic bags: hundreds of years

Cigarette butt: up to five years & leaches toxins into the ground

Newspaper: 2 to 4 weeks or longer

Glass bottles: tens of thousands of years

Styrofoam: no sign of ever breaking down




Here are a few photos of my finished chair and the mosaic process! 

"Before" photo
The chair had a metal frame with black enamel paint and a curved plywood seat



To begin, I sanded the entire chair, wiped it down and then painted it... I knew from the start that I was going to use an earth colored grout for the mosaic, so I decided to paint the chair to match the grout - a warm shade of nutmeg brown. 

I let the paint dry for 24 hours and then it was time to get down to business!




The mosaic process: 
I used a strong silicone based adhesive to adhere the china shards to the chair. I chose this adhesive because of the material of the chair (wood and metal.)

Because I was using china shards of various shapes, sizes and thicknesses, and because I wanted my finished piece to have a handcrafted, vintage feel, I chose not to create any rigid pattern for my design, but instead approached the creation of the design in sort of a folk-art way; using what I had to fit together piece by piece, allowing the design to form as it was created.



Above photo: allowing the adhesive to dry before grouting




Once I finished adhering all of the china to the chair, I set the chair aside for a few days to allow the adhesive to dry and cure. Next it was time to grout. I used sanded grout in the color nutmeg brown.

I liked that this shade of grout had an earthy, natural feel, and it also creates great contrast to the colors of the china, from the blues to the whites, it really makes the colors "pop".  



Detail of some of the china shards used...I included some interesting manufacturers marks, or "backstamps" into the mosaic. These are the maker's marks that are found on the reverse sides of plates.



Detail of some of the china shards used


 This particular shard on the seat came from an advertising plate from 1909. 
It reads, "Compliments of Peter Schuit, The Cash Grocer"














Want to create a project like this?

Here are some recommended materials:




I used E600 adhesive and Polyblend sanded grout (the color I used was Nutmeg) for this project. The crafts sticks aren't an essential but really do come in handy for helping spread your adhesive and grout!




Senin, 02 Agustus 2010

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Mosaic: When Art Inspires Poetry



MOSAIC

I will bring my hammer down on you hard
And for that brief second close my eyes
(believe me, this hurts me more than you�)
All of your beauty �

Shattered with one swift swing
And cleaning up the pieces �

A messy job.

But I must admit � I thought of you,
In that particular, sentimental way

before I did you in

Oh, the beautiful company you�ve held,
The admiring eyes,
The groping hands once all over you,
Fingertips touching and feeling
Your every sleek curve and smooth�

Patience is the key now
To give the mastic time to dry before

Mixing just the perfect hue of grout

to complement your new assemblage

Oh wedding vase, anniversary plate,
Knick-knack cat, teapot lid.

-Laura Beth Love
1999


Mosaic bird's nest bowl made from broken china




Wedding Vase



Anniversary Plate



Knick-knack cat




Royal Winton Chintz teapot and lid

Below: Necklace I made from same chintz pattern shown above

poem copyright 1999 Laura Beth Love

Senin, 26 Juli 2010

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The Mudlark: A Broken China Mosaic Bowl


This sweet little orphaned bird was once one of a pair of small salt shakers. 

Now he�s got a brand new home - among some shards of history...





Built upon a vintage wooden bowl, this mosaic nest of sorts tells a colorful story of potteries long closed and abandoned. The majority of the pottery used for this piece was collected by my uncle, hand-picked at low tide from the banks of the Thames River in England between the Globe and the National Theatres. Some of the shards in this piece date as early as the 1700�s.

Like collecting seashells along the shore of the ocean, the banks of the Thames offer colorful shards of broken china and pottery � reminders of the once thriving potters that populated the area. Collecting these shards is known as mudlarking - as beachcombing refers to ocean shores, mudlarking refers to river banks - and it�s history runs deep.





A century or two ago, the term Mudlarks referred the very poor of London who scavenged the riverbanks along the Themes collecting anything they could find that might have some value. Mudlarks were most often children or elderly folk -those without income who needed to scavenge to survive.

They looked for coins, bottles, pieces of pottery or coal � the sorts of things that might have been discarded or fallen off of a ship. They would collect these found objects and then sell or trade them for food.

Nowadays you can still comb the shores for pottery shards, but beware...it is said that all that is found on public ground is property of the Queen!


Happy Hunting!
~ Laura


Sabtu, 14 Februari 2009

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Be My Valentine

If ever there was a day for chocolate and goodies, today's that day! Today we celebrate love ~ some with kisses and hugs, others with cards and candy. What's not to love about the heart itself? Here are some mosaic hearts I designed and created using shards of vintage broken china and vintage images. Like each one of us, these mosaic hearts each have their own unique personalities. Happy Valentine's Day to you! Enjoy, and remember to tell someone that you love them!


~ Find Peace ~

~ Hot Stuff! ~



~ Dream Big ~

all designs & artwork copyright 2009