Welcome
back to the next installment of this project. Let us jump right on in
with this journey, shall we? Where we left off in Celestial World Tree - Part 1, I explained
my thought process for what I wanted to do with the box, the
brainstorming and rough design work for the project.
Cutting,
Sanding, Glueing and Screwing
|
Sanded, Glued & Screwed |
My
wonderful father was certainly a huge help with this part since there
was so many pieces that needed work. When I explained what I needed
done, he was more then willing to lend his assistance. He was able to
cut out the center logo of the lid while keeping the outlined circle
intact then went ahead and followed my measurements for the interior
panel and cut it out for me. I cut the back piece that was meant for
the lid and made sure that the whole thing would be able to slide
into position if the box was to be closed. Then onto the sanding!
Going from a 220 to a 400, I made sure that various pieces were
smooth. This also was the time I repeatedly test fitted the interior
panel to see where I needed to sand a bit more for a better fit. The
piece for the lid was glued into position and I waited overnight
before doing another test fit. Luckily I had plenty of frame hooks at
my disposal for the box and my father had tiny eye-hooks in his own
stash of bits and bobs so that I could get those in place.
|
Working on Lines |
Defining
the Lines
Looking back at my rough sketches for the designs,
there was a lot scribbles in spots that I knew I needed to rework
before I transferred them to the wood. Grabbing another piece of
paper, I measured out the sizes before using a light box to carefully
trace the shapes. The design for the internal panel wasn't bad and
only needed a couple of fixes. The lid, however, had a couple of
elements that needed some reworking. Once done, taped transfer paper
and the designs to their respective pieces and began the transferring
process. Of course, once again the lid was being the problem child of
this en-devour. I actually had to do the lid's design transfer in two
parts – First had to cut the center of the design out and set it
aside, transfer the outer design first then go back and do the
center. There was probably a better way to do it but too late now.
Prep and
Wait
Now that
the transferring was done, I carefully looked over everything.
Normally with my wood pieces I could go straight for coloring with my
Prismacolor color pencils. However for the feel I wanted to go with,
watercolors would be involved as well. Of course this meant that I
needed to prep the wood first. So once I made sure my surfaces were
clean and ready, painted on a layer of Transparent Watercolor Ground.
With such things, make sure to wait the allotted 24 to 48 hours,
depending on how thick or how many layers you've put on. Once I made
sure that the surfaces were completely covered with as even a coat as
possible, I set them aside to dry over night and contemplated my next batch of steps. At this point I will be keeping my fingers crossed that when I have in my head will be able to be made real. Guess we'll all find out in the next installment. Stay tuned!
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