I seem to have missed all the friending fun as in the last couple of weeks I have been incredibly busy with preparations for a friend at work's wedding. Thankfully, that is now over and I can make a post too
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They are lovely! The bat is quite large... You could do a similar design with lace strengthened somehow instead of the clay and that would be more wearable?
I saw this posted to Twitter today - http://91magazine.co.uk/blog/2016/3/5/91-loves-weaving - and now I want to do something in amongst, I dunno, actually putting up the shelves I've had since Christmas. I might be hiring a drill at some weekend. This one is just too lovely... Though it must have taken an age and a half. And cost a bomb in wool.
Its a rubber stamp pressed into the clay. If I made it smaller, it could probably fit the whole design. It's hard to get a good, deep impression without the clay going squidge though. I will probably had a another go after the raven. Maybe it'll be about 10cm this time!
A drill might be a good investment, I have one that's good enough and it was about £20. At that price, why hire it?
Weaving looks hard to master, time consuming and difficult to dust. Good luck, I'm not touching that one! (they are pretty though)
I meant as a replacement for the wings - though I now realise the whole thing is clay; I was fooled into thinking the chainy bits were really chains!!! The bronzey colour is very realistic in the flash.
I thought about this, and they had some deals at Homebase last weekend at least, but they said they would only go 2cm max or something into masonry, which might be a lie, but the walls here are half concrete or something and I've had real trouble with my dad's drill on several holes when I did some other stuff - I didn't want to end up in the situation where I had basically half a hole and a drill I couldn't take back...
Considering I'd like to do a big one, I think it would be another case of my needing patience I don't have. These things are made for people who like fiddling with fiddly things (*looks up*)... Sigh. But I want one that's all clashy and pudgy and fluffy!
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I got carried away!!
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I saw this posted to Twitter today - http://91magazine.co.uk/blog/2016/3/5/91-loves-weaving - and now I want to do something in amongst, I dunno, actually putting up the shelves I've had since Christmas. I might be hiring a drill at some weekend. This one is just too lovely... Though it must have taken an age and a half. And cost a bomb in wool.
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A drill might be a good investment, I have one that's good enough and it was about £20. At that price, why hire it?
Weaving looks hard to master, time consuming and difficult to dust. Good luck, I'm not touching that one! (they are pretty though)
Reply
I thought about this, and they had some deals at Homebase last weekend at least, but they said they would only go 2cm max or something into masonry, which might be a lie, but the walls here are half concrete or something and I've had real trouble with my dad's drill on several holes when I did some other stuff - I didn't want to end up in the situation where I had basically half a hole and a drill I couldn't take back...
Considering I'd like to do a big one, I think it would be another case of my needing patience I don't have. These things are made for people who like fiddling with fiddly things (*looks up*)... Sigh. But I want one that's all clashy and pudgy and fluffy!
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Okay, fair enough. I only have flimsy walls.
I think the rag rug technique fills a lot of space with less effort, but I am probably wrong.
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Oooh, shiny!
I love that bat.
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