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Monday, July 28, 2014

Elephant Ear Leaf Casting

I cut one of my elephant ear leafs to make a leaf casting today.  I was a little better about not mixing too much cement.  I was over by about a cup and a half which isn't too bad... better to much than too little.  Since I had trouble with air bubbles in the cement of my basin project over the weekend, I decided to try brushing the PAM around the leaf after spraying it... I used a clean 2" brush to do that.  It did come out much smoother with less air bubbles but I don't know if it was from the brushing or from casting a single leaf instead of layers of leaves.  I did have quite a bit of cleanup along the edges this time.  The edges of the leaf were sort of ruffled which looks nice but the cement had a tendency to get away from me.  My cement may have been a little too loose so I will make it a bit drier to see if that helps.  The leaf released without any tears so I am going to use it to make a second leaf (I put it in water out in the garage refrigerator to keep it fresh).  Here are some photos of my casting process.  Detailed instructions can be found on the "Leaf Casting" page her on my blog.

A clean leaf over formed damp sand covered in plastic
Work the cement from the middle of the leaf outward toward the edge.
After you have finished applying cement all the
way to the edge, lay a heavy wire on the back.
Add more cement to secure the wire.
Brush it smooth with a damp paint brush so it looks nice.
You will probably need to rinse the brush a few times to clean
the cement off.  Be sure to not to have the brush to wet.  
Here it is!  I just love this part!!!  After 8 hours of drying, I
flipped it over and removed the leaf. It looks pretty good   :-)
The edges need cleaning... this is where the cement
got away from me because it was a little too wet.
Edges cleaned
The natural pointed tip of the elephant ear
All cleaned up with no breaks.  I have covered it back
up with plastic.It just needs to cure for a week or more.

Sunday, July 27, 2014

Leaf Casting of Basin Using Fig Leaves

I removed the fig leaves from the basin I made yesterday and this is what I have.  Nothing cracked and tips are all in tact... yay!  While the cement was still soft, I deepened some of the veins using a metal skewer where I thought it needed it.  The shape turned out nice but I found that I had a lot of air holes in the surface of the cement.  I'm not sure what is causing this.  I didn't have any sand on the leaves... they were clean.  I'm wondering if it is because I used several layers of leaves and opportunity was there for air to be trapped under the cement.  Has anyone else ever had this happen?  Hopefully, it will be fine and not that noticeable once completed.




Saturday, July 26, 2014

Tabletop Fountain

Today, I thought I would start a tabletop fountain with fig leaves from our fig tree.  I am starting with making the bowl/basin.  I mounded up the wet sand that will shape the basin then covered the sand with saran wrap. Next, I placed the leaves in a circle with leaf tips pointing down.  Spray with Pam cooking spray. Start adding and working the concrete (refer to concrete mix info on my leaf casting page) from the center down to the tips of the leaves.  Remember, you need to have it at east 1/4" along the edge of the bowl.  Let it set up for an hour or so then cover with plastic to help prevent cracking.

Fig leaves to form basin


Spread concrete over the leaves


Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Leaf Castings


I came across these fountains on Pinterest a few weeks ago and fell in love.  The beautiful fountain leaves are actually stained or painted concrete leaf castings.  Elephant Ears were used for the fountain in the photo on the left and Gunnera leaves for the fountain in the photo on the right.  What a great idea for the perfect garden fountain.   I knew it was time to research how to do it.   The great thing about blogs is we can read about the process and what others have experienced...  make note of not only what has worked but especially note what doesn't work... no need to repeat history if something doesn't work.




Since I have friends interested in learning how to do leaf casting, I thought it might be helpful and fun to post my own experiences with making leaf castings and eventually the assembly of my first fountain.  I haven't found instructions for fountain assembly online but surely it can't be too difficult.  My husband will help, he has been a big help for the leaf castings.  He has much more experience with concrete than I do.   Here on my blog you will hear about both my successes and failures... both are helpful.  Please feel free to make suggestions or comments and share your experiences...  that is what it's all about.