Sunday, February 27, 2022

Mary, Mary, How Does Your Garden Grow?

 The weather continues to be cold, really cold with snow and freezing temperatures. As February ends and March arrives, our minds here at the Garden Spot turn toward the garden. With 5 acres to tend, there's a lot to think about. While we wait for good weather, my husband has been planning the vegetable garden, sorting old seed packs, buying new ones, and creating a planting plan. I've been gardening of sorts too--the mini kind. I'm designing gardens for two big farm houses, the Bellingham Farmhouse and the Manchester Country Home, and that's a lot of plant material.

I've been ordering plant kits for some time, so I have pretty good inventory, but I need a lot of plant material and kits are expensive, so I've been making plants from scratch. 

I first wrote about my flower making projects in May 2019 inspired by bloggers who taught me so much: "Stepping out of My Comfort Zone: Making Flowers". I began developing my flower making skills by learning how to assemble the flowers from kits and then by looking for tutorials online to learn how to make my own. These bloggers have such good tutorials:


These are my favorite vendors for flower kits:
I've been ordering new punches, too, so that I can fashion my own miniature flowers. You can find punches on AMAZON and Ebay, but I order mine from The Punch Bunch on Etsy. 

I've making geraniums and hydrangeas this week. They are made pretty much same way and I've posted about both of them before, so I won't repeat the geranium tutorial; you can see that tutorial in this post: Crafting with Granny and More Flowers shows how a I made hydrangea then, but I've changed how I make them. 

But before I begin, a word about which is the best: buying flower kits or making flowers from scratch.

Buying flower kits would be the best option if you want just a couple of house plants or simple flower arrangements or if you don't want to invest in the punches.

If, however, you have a big project that requires a lot of flowers, such as an entire garden, investing in some simple tools will be money well spent, for you will be using  the same punches for many different flowers. I've been ordering a couple of punches every now and then as I decide which flowers I want to add to my mini garden. They average just under $5. each with shipping added. 



Both the geranium and hydrangea need a foundation. You can use any number of items to create a flower head: beads, paper fashioned flower heads--one tutorial uses toilet paper--, or as I do, making my own flower head foundations with oven bake polymer clay. Farm 2 Market YouTube tutorial uses paper clay to make flower head beads. Air dry clay would also work. I just use what I have on hand. For this project, I used wooden beads that make very large mop-head type hydrangea and my clay beads to make smaller heads.


I have two different ball stylus, giving me four sizes to work the flowers. I use two types of wire, one paper covered, one not. I find that the paper covered wire doesn't penetrate the styrofoam that I use in pots and planters, so I poke holes to insert the flower stem. 


I use jewelers pliers to twist a platform for the bead to sit on. I paint the beads first, except when I forget. 


I like making my own beads because I can adjust the size. Farm 2 Market makes hers about 5-6 mm, but I think that is really small. 7 mm, even 8-10 would be okay. The geranium beads have to small.


What kind of paper works best for flowers? You can order special papers from Amazon and from some specialized craft shops, but I use card stock, colored and white typing paper, and my new favorite, white coffee filters. If you use scrapbook card stock, you don't have to paint it, but some complain that card stock doesn't hold the shape you create using the ball stylus. The colored typing paper works well and comes in a variety pack: light blue, pink, yellow, and maybe lavender, but you get far more paper than what you will ever need and you don't have the variety of colors. I have even considered those sticky note pads with a variety of colors. Still they are limited in colors. I have new favorite: white coffee filter.


The coffee filter accepts paint well; it doesn't fall apart when it gets wet,  dries quickly, and you have the flexibility to mix your acrylic paints to the shade and hues that want. I even mixed some old water color pastes to get a light shade of blue. The acrylic paints can be mixed and thinned with water so that you get just the color that you want. You do need to mix plenty because is you run out, you will have a hard time getting the same color the next time you try to blend paints. 


 So as a beginner, you start with what you have on hand and experiment to decide what works best for you.

One hydrangea requires a lot of little flowers. I found that I needed an entire one side a filter. I don't worry too much about getting the paint shade even because the flower head is made up of individual little blossoms will vary in shade. Some lighter; some darker.


I use the smaller ball to shape the blossom, rubbing it in a circular motion on a piece of craft foam.


Next I use a toothpick to spread tacky glue on the bottom of the bead that has been glued to the wire foundation then blossom by blossom I attach each one as closely to each other to close the gaps. You will note that I didn't paint this wooden bead, so I made sure to jam those little blooms as closely together as possible, working row by row.




Here is a finished flower. I love the color. It is a larger head. I made 3 for a large pot. For some reason I didn't photograph the leaves. Punch 4 leaves and glue them to the stem beneath the flower heat so that they are positioned around the bottom of flower.


To fill in the gaps, I glued some leaves to wire stems without the blossoms to make a fuller planter.



Hydrangeas come in so many beautiful colors. Do a web search to help you decide on color and how you want to design your plant.

Containers


You can source pots from a variety of places. These wooden ones I find at Hobby Lobby. The first one comes in a smaller size, too. They are perfect for the miniature garden and can be painted whatever color you want.


I love the authentic red clay pots, but the mini ones are getting hard to find, being replaced with resin or plastic pots. Cinderella Moments has a great tutorial on these little plastic pots on how to customize them and make them look used and vintage. The large pot and the bowl pot came from Molly Sue Miniatures. I love her things. She ships from Isle of Man, UK.


I've had these for a while. I think I picked them up at a show.


I used caladium leaves to fill in around the geraniums. Creating them will be the next tutorial.


 I love this cobalt blue pot. I don't have one in the real garden, maybe this year.

Not bad a couple of afternoons--well evenings, too.

The geraniums are assembled the same way. I use the smallest blossom on the punch. You can actually use the same punch for both flowers.

 I've discovered that by moving the paper to the make next punch instead of moving the punch along the paper, the little flowers stake up, making it easy to sort and store. I save the sauce containers from McDonald's to store my extra flower pieces.


I use these punches to make cascading flowers that flow out of pots. I attach the tiny leaves to the floral wire and then add the flowers.



Whether you decide to use punches to create your own flowers or to buy kits, flower making can be quite satisfying. I follow Facebook group that offers such good good inspiration and  tips  how to make flowers. I've learned by searching Youtube and Pinterest for tutorials. 

Some of my flowers aren't really botanically accurate, but I think we can feel free to create what we want, what we like, what works for us. 

In another month I hope to be out in the real garden. I usually start my gardening mid-March during my spring break at the university. Until then, I'll be working on the gardens for the dollhouse. Hydrangeas are such a favorite, but I just haven't had success in our climate, though they do grow here. I'm hoping that the one plant last year survives the winter, but the mini hydrangea will thrive in the little gardens. Until I can get my hands in the garden soil, I'll be making more mini flowers to fill my little gardens.

And how does your garden grow?

Thanks for visiting. 

On a final note, I follow Sweet Mini Dollhouse by a very talented and gifted artist on Instagram who posts wonderful short tutorials using polymer clay to fashion a variety of minis and she has an Etsy store. She lives the Ukraine. My heart breaks for her and her country. She's posting about what she and her family are going through, which makes this horrible war real and personal. There's not much you and I can do, except to pray for Ukrainians. 




6 comments:

  1. Your recent posts have been top notch; full of sources and easy to follow how-to’s. You really have a knack for making and arranging flowers. I was looking at my punch collection the other day, wondering if I should add to them. Then I thought, why not cut additional shapes with my Cricut? I have used both the Cameo 4 and the Cricut Maker for house plants. Your beautiful flowers are a thoughtful complement to the ugliness of the invasion of Ukraine.

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  2. To make the caladium leaves for the planters, I uploaded them to Design Space and cut them out on the Cricut Maker. I thought this post was long enough, so I'll show how a made the leaves in the next post. I just haven't had time to play more with cutting out flower parts on the machine. Thanks for your kind words.

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  3. Your flowers look great Ann! Good work and thanks for all the info. And good luck on the real life gardening! It’s a big job, especially when you have 5 acres to tend to.

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  4. Thank you, Shannon. Just passing time until Spring arrives.

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  5. Although, I've used coffee filter papers before and found them to be accessible, cheap and durable; I'd forgotten just how good they ARE so reading through your tutorial was a refresher and a timely reminder to me for 'Next Time". :)
    AND I must say how PRETTY your finished pots are especially the cladiums with the red geraniums- quite Stunning! Love the vibrancy of white cascading flowers and the muted colors of the hydrangeas - WONDERFUL WONDERFUL WONDERFUL!

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  6. Thank you so much, Elizabeth. I learned howe to make the geraniums from you, though, I developed my own way. Your kind words mean so much. I've been trying to find a good paper and the coffee filter seems to work. I need to learn more about painting, now.

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