Monday 10 July 2023

Two Plants for the Garden Corner



 There are two finished plants for the garden corner, both of which in Real Life grow in my garden; the dianthus and the hydrangea. The former is meant to create a pop of colour in what will otherwise be a very "faded" garden....

It took 3 different plant pots before I was happy with the pot the dianthus are now in; the first was too big, the second still too big, and the third one was just right! These little flowers were made following a tutorial by Michaela of Michaela's Miniatures, a German blog. I coloured white paper with alcohol markers, dotted on a centre of white paint, and when that was dry, added a tiny pink dot with a fine marker pen. 


Close-up you can perhaps see the detail in these flowers; there are tiny sprigs of real greenery between the paper flowerets, which are fixed to two cupped snowflake punchies glued back to back. The hydrangea buds are painted seeds of some kind I found in my spice cupboard; as the label had come off the container, I can't tell you what they are, but they are red-brown and about the same size as poppy seeds.

As I'm going away for a few days, there will be no blogging for a week or so, but I hope to be able to get to work on the roses very soon.

Monday 3 July 2023

Well, It Seemed Like a Good Idea!

 The lavender plant has been planted, but it is not going into the garden corner!


I had long wanted to make the rooster plant sticker (1 zu 12 Magazine), so I decided to plant the lavender in a weathered, painted basket and stick the rooster in with it. However, it seemed out of scale with the rather small garden corner vignette. It is now living in the Provencal scent shop setting - roosters are, after all, a symbol used in France! It works much better here.


The weathered zinc planter which used to live in the Provencal scent shop setting is now going to live in the garden corner, as this size planter is much more in scale. Oddly, the flower soft-like material I used to make the lavender blossoms had turned a sort of rusty maroon colour in the past 10 years; I imagine it interacted with the glue somehow. A fine paint brush and some lavender paint restored the colour, and it looks good now.

On to planting the hydrangea; however, I may wait a bit with that and put together a dianthus plant instead, as I've long wanted to try the tutorial on one of the German miniatures blogs....