A bit more progress, accelerating toward completion. Before going much further, I gave the whole thing an overspray of clear matte:
The glaziers showed up at the job site and got the stained glass installed. I shamelessly used Carstens' graphics printed on vellum paper, cut to size, then pasted in with a bit of Elmer's white glue. The process can be a bit dismaying at first, as the paper has a tendency to curl terribly when it touches the glue. However, a bit of diligence with a flat edge, along with a bit of burnishing, and everything eventually shrinks up nice and tight. I'm second-guessing whether I should have included frames of some sort, but too late for that now. Made a note in the project book.
I hated that front door's white trim, so I made a new one with a green frame using MS Paint. Looks better to me, although the door color looks a bit faint altogether. Colors generated by my HP ink-jet printer leave a lot to be desired.
Started working on the base, a simple 10"x12"x1" panel fashioned from USPS corrugated. This time I bent the edges over rather than scoring them; the advantage is there's no long edge to be papered, the disadvantage being it's tough to get a nice sharp edge. I added some bracing to the underside to try to draw the edges vertical...mixed results, that. Still had to paper the corners.
Fencing will be modeled after one of the local churchyards here. I cut some heavy corrugated at 3/4-inch high, which looks a bit too low. Might recut that to twice the height...not sure yet. Cutting thick corrugated on a bevel free-hand is a challenge.