Monday, 29 September 2014

Hanging Basket

My house came with a hanging basket in the porch. That's silly because it's sheltered from the sun and the rain. Let's face facts; I'm not going to remember to water any plants I put in there. So I'm not putting plants in it.


I thought I could put in some artificial flowers but James gave me the idea that I could make any kind of display out of anything. Oooh the possibilities!! So I will probably redesign this thing a few times - I already have ideas for Halloween and Christmas.

Anywho... for my first hanging basket design I decided to go with an 'under the sea' theme.

I bought these things from Amazon. I've learned how to make my pictures into links just so you can find these things if you want to.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B006JB5PF4/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1 http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00KIJ19ZS/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B009ZUPOPW/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

When James took the basket down for me (I couldn't reach) we found a plant that had somehow survived in there. I put it into a cottage cheese pot that was bound for the recycling. All the other stuff in the basket just got dumped into the garden, except I kept the lining bit.


I layered my fake seaweed in the cage and put the straw thingy in, wrapped in green tissue paper. But I didn't like it. The stones on the seaweed look all wrong and the tissue paper doesn't look like the sea.



I considered painting the straw thing in shades of blue and green (which I'm sure wouldn've looked pretty cool) but then I saw this wool in Wilko and I thought 'it looks like the sea' so I bought it and I wrapped the wool round and round the lining. Luckily I had quite a bit of wool left for later.




I pulled the seaweeds out of their stones and put them back in their cage. Then I carefully put the cage onto the other bit.



Next I had to do the hanging pieces. I was going to hang the shells and fishes from the basket using clear plastic beading thread, but I couldn't find any in the shops that day so I used my leftover wool instead.

The seashells come with holes pierced in them, but the holes weren't big enough to thread my wool straight through and I didn't have a big enough needle or a needle threader :(

Then I saw this guy. The container originally held Lucius, my littlest cactus, but after he outgrew his vial James decided to put a tiny soldier in there.


Anyway I took the stringy bit off the top and used it like a needle threader to pull the wool through the holes. If that doesn't make any sense look at the pictures. I tied a knot in the ends of my wools. I didn't tie any more knots, even on the ones that have more than one shell on them because I didn't think the shells were likely to fall.



Then I had to do the fish. This was a bit harder because not only did they not come with holes in them, they didn't want to have holes in them either. Whenever I removed whatever implement I'd used to make a hole, it started to close up.

I got the hang of it eventually. I stabbed a hole with a drawing pin, waited a few minutes, then removed the pin and replaced it with a nail to make the hole bigger. A few minutes after that I took out the nail and shoved my 'needle threader' through, then pulled the wool through it quickly. It would've been much more fun if I hadn't stabbed myself with a nail in the process.



To fix all my hanging things in place, I wrapped the stones from my seaweed in a piece of the aforementioned tissue paper. I taped all my strings to the paper then I put the parcel inside the basket and arranged my strings around the outside.



So far so good. I clipped the chains back onto the thing, but it didn't quite look finished. I found this white boa type thing and thought it would be perfect for the foam on top of my sea so I threaded it through the hooks on the chains.



Now it looks finished. And in my opinion, this hanging basket really stands out on our street.


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