This garden project started with an Unfinished Kitchen Cabinet from Alpha Stamps. A wash of antiquing fluid was all that was needed to finish it. The two doors and drawer open for storing empty flower pots or tools. Functional miniature furniture is fantastic, isn't it?
I used several different containers for the plants and flowers made for the mini garden, like an Oval Wicker Fruit Basket with Handle, a Mini Wooden Toolbox, and a Set of Miscellaneous Flower Pots. There are even plants in kitchen canisters!
The wild fern in the back, the colorful puffball plants, and the razor plant in the red canister are pre-made and simply stuck right into a planter.
There's a very nice fern stand next to the cabinet, and on top of it is...a fern. What else?? I tucked another of those adorable "puffball" plants into a thimble for a bit of variety, and made flowers for a few other pots.
Quite a few plants were set into a Rustic Wheelbarrow on the right. Also inside is a white canister with a paper snake plant and ivy leaves glued inside. In front of the wheelbarrow are a crate of tiny flowers, a planter of pink hydrangeas, and a pot of elephant ears. Both the hydrangeas and the elephant ear plant were made using punches, and I'll show you how to do that in a bit. In fact, I used punches for nearly every flower and leaf in the garden. It's easy stuff.
Here are those cute puffball plants blooming from a wooden toolbox. They are too much!
Let's make some hydrangeas, shall we?
Materials:
Set of 3 Hydrangeas Mini Punch
Heart Mini Punch
Tissue Paper
Green cardstock
Green floral wire, paddle wire, or green stem wire
Styrofoam
Glue
Tweezers
Ball stylus
Foam mat
1. Punch out several tissue paper hydrangeas. I stacked a few layers of tissue paper on top of a sheet of copy paper before punching out the shapes to make it easier. Use tweezers to separate the layers.
3. "Cup" the petals by rolling a ball stylus in the center of each punched shape until it curls up. I did this on a scrap of sheet foam.
4. Cover the styrofoam on the stem with glue and attach the petals using tweezers. Nearly there!
5. Punch out leaves from the green cardstock using the Mini Heart Punch. Add veins to the heart shapes with the ball stylus. Dip the leaves into glue and attach to the wire stem. Now make thirty more because they're fun!
Materials:
Small Heart Punch
Cardstock
Floral wire, paddle wire, or stem wire
Scissors
Ball Stylus
Glue
Craft paint (optional)
1. Paint both sides of the cardstock with a few shades of green. This is optional; they look great without this step too. Punch out the leaves using the Heart punch.
2. Trim off a sliver of the heart on both sides to shape the leaf.
3. Create veins with the ball stylus on the back of the leaf. Turn the leaf over and dry brush the front with a light green or yellow craft paint.
4. Bend over an end of the wire...
and glue it to the back of the leaf. Repeat. Enjoy your tiny masterpiece!
Some of the other flowers made with punches include:
the red geraniums (using a tiny circular hole punch for the flower and a Mini Clover Paper Punch for the leaves. I punched the leaves from cardstock and snipped off the stem of the clover before gluing it to the wire stem)
the light blue flowers in the back (using the Bellflower Mini Punch for the flower and Heart Mini Punch for the leaves. There's also ivy in that pot made from the Ivy Leaf Mini Punch)
and the pink flowers in front (also the Bellflower Mini Punch).
This tiny tree was made by disassembling a Miniature Rustic Broom, dipping the ends in glue, then attaching Leafy Green Underbrush and Clump Foliage to the branches.
Even though I can't get "out in the garden" without severe repercussions, creating this miniature temporarily fulfilled the want to be outside, and not a single flower bit the dust. Until...
Happy gardening to you, however you decide to do it!
A list of supplies can be found RIGHT HERE.
(oh, did you spy the garden gnome?)
Fantastic job Shannon! Love it all. Going to buy me some supplies now. :)
ReplyDeleteYour miniatures and tiny work never fail to amaze me. Shan,YOU are amazing!
ReplyDeleteThank you! Have fun creating your own garden, and find joy in the smallish things.
ReplyDelete