Thursday, 24 December 2015

Faux Stained Glass Project



I love coloured lights and I don’t care how I get my kicks – Christmas trees, fairy lights and even sweet wrappers fascinate me.

So it’s no surprise to me that I am equally captivated by stained glass. I’m particularly fond of the stained glass panels in old houses but the costs of real stained glass are astronomical and the skill required to lead real glass takes years to master. So after some dogged research, I came upon an alternative. Vitrail Glass Paints and a silicone material called liquid lead.


Here briefly, is how I did it. 

You don’t need any fancy design tool to create a design - I used Microsoft paint. I made this template shape based upon the old ‘compass and circle’ pattern you used to do as school as a kid. I wanted accuracy and so being a circle, I only needed to do ¼ of it and simply flip horizontally then vertically to get the circle design.

I replicated 3 times to get a repeating pattern and scaled to fit my design, sellotaped it to the back of the Perspex and then outlined the pattern with liquid Lead. This stuff sticks to anything - including table cloths, shirts, plates, window sills, doors and babies. The only things that can get it off are scouring pads and teeth – so be warned.  

Once the outline was cured it was just a case of painting the colours. I thinned my paints out with white spirit to make the paints more transparent and a pipette for measuring out ratios. This glass paint will dry to glass so you can bet you sweet mother it will dry on tabletops, window ledges, sinks, taps kettles, kitchen tiles...the list is endless. Blink your eye and a yellow spill on the window sill is now a permanent dried up puddle of cat wee.

The technique I used was flood filling.I needed to do at least 2 coats on each stained glass because each layer dried out totally leaving just a thin veneer of colour. Personal taste I guess but I wanted rich colours.

The Drying time is approx 12 hours between fills and I would advocate only doing one colour at a time just in case you get spillages and leaks. Also, and this is imperative, make sure your glass is on a level floor else the paint will pool on one side.  

The results I think are pretty awesome. It turned out far better than I was expecting. I love the way the rainbow colours dapple across the wall when the sun comes through and at night, the warm glow welcomes me home. I’m keen to continue the theme and I’ve got my eyes on the conservatory now.....




Saturday, 28 March 2015

There’s a Moose, loose aboot this Hoose (mice in the house!)



We love our wildlife garden. It’s full of life and energy especially in the spring. A flock of Blue tits and goldfinches are now regulars alongside the Jenny Wren, robin and 2 pairs of blackbirds with their wonderful birdsong. The oversexed frogs and Toads have turned our pond into tapioca and the hedgehog is back. I plan to add some kale in amongst the wildflower patch ready for the butterflies and white cabbage caterpillars. The hawthorn pushing through will provide food for the beautiful grey dagger moth caterpillar and shelter for the birds. When the bloom pushes through, the insects will return. Something the resident bats will welcome as they have once again started whirring around our house in the early twilight hours recently.

What we also have in the garden and which I love with equal measure, is mice. I used to have mice as a kid so I’m quite familiar with them and I am more than happy to co-exist with these little fur-balls – provided they stay where they should – in the garden. There’s plenty of food for them to forage, a huge woodpile to make a home in– what’s not to like? Its Mouse utopia. Well apparently not. Last week we found our bird seed plastic container under the sink gnawed along the edges. The Mouse had landed. We emptied the cupboard under the sink immediately, bleached it through and put all the contents in quarantine for a couple of days.

3 days later we were back to normal. Or so I thought.....Lying on the couch this Thursday evening thinking of exercising, I was startled into movement by a banshee cry from the playroom. I immediately burst into action and turned the TV volume up. I then went to investigate. Wifey was standing in the doorway with her arms up and pressed tightly into her chest and a finger just pointing out from below her nose...

“I saw a mouse!”
“Where?”
“There”
“On the stair?”
“Right there!”

It wasn’t a little mouse with clogs on (those of a younger age will need to google that reference) The mouse had crossed the line.....He had gone from garden to cupboard and now had taken to brazenly sauntering about our playroom. Drastic action need to happen. With a toddler and a pregnant wifey, incontinent mice dragging their ever active nether-regions across the floors just wasn’t going to work.

So, do we poison him? No – too cruel and painful for the mouse
Mousetrap? It’s quick but rather brutal
We settled on a humane trap.

(I should say at this juncture, as is always the case throughout my blog, I will asterisk any brand names to avoid potential litigation...) So...to continue... I was forced to take a trip to A*da to buy rather expensive Rentok*ll  ‘capture and release’ trap. I set the trap just by the H*tpoint washing machine and laced it with Cadb*rys chocolate buttons just before bedtime.
2 hours later, a rattling sound drifted to the bedroom. I went down for a goob.....there in the trap scratching away at the door was said mouse. Brilliant. Tomorrow we will release the little fella. He didn’t need any food – the greedy git had already polished off the chocolate buttons. I put him in a dark cupboard for the night.

In the morning, I hatched Operation Dangermouse. The plan was genius in its simplicity... Covertly transport the mouse to the local farm. Buy a Victoria sponge. Come home and have a nice cup of tea and a slice of cake. This would involve full family participation:

Mouse and mousetrap go into my overcoat pocket.
Although only 60 yards down the road, we take the car route to the farm which gives us access to the rear car park.
From there we can see the target drop off point (hay barn) just to the right.
Hattie and I ask Farmer Brown if we can go and see the hens in the hay barn.
Wifey and I separate. Wifey heads to the farm shop for a nice Victoria sponge and some milk – distracting the assistant.
 Hattie and I reach the target drop off point and begin fussing about. A quick check to make sure farmer Brown isn’t looking and.... mousetrap out, flaps open and he’s off! A new life on the farm.

Agreed? Great. Lets go!
Nappy change - coat on - Hattie in the car
Boots on - scarf on - Wifey ready
Crocs on - coat on - Dad hungry
Cupboard doors open trap picked up....
Mouse dead.

That’s right. Dead. The selfish rodent lay there in his own filth, his chocolate smeared face staring unblinkingly and impassively up at me (yooooou did this to me ....yooooooou.....)

The rescue plan, a work of genius, lay in tatters on the floor...
Wifey began to gag...
Hattie began to cry in the car...
Mouse piss began to seep out of the trap and onto my fingers.

In my attempt to be humane, I ended up doing completely the opposite. Good job I’m not a doctor. Checking the web, these humane traps catch the mouse easily enough but what they don’t say is that you must release it immediately or else the mouse becomes highly stressed and likely dies of heart failure.

The day has been a bit of a disaster. Not a complete disaster though, I muse to myself as I take a sip of tea and spoon another piece of Victoria sponge in my mouth - you can have your cake and eat it.

Sadly for our furry friend, curiosity killed the mouse.