I really liked the Candy Box that Barb found and posted earlier, and since I already had the Santa, I knew I just had to build it. Following her dimensions, I jumped right in. Instead of using wood for the base, I glued together 4 cardboard pieces from the covers of old Golden Books. After priming with 2 coats, I attached the stone siding and then painted over that and added a touch of mica. The tree is made from a section of pipe cleaner and the windows are a heavy type of crepe paper and the door is actually a church window, like the castle Barb found. After I took the pictures, I did add a little snow tex to the tower peak and roof top edge. This was a fun putz to build.
New Candy Box build
Re: New Candy Box build
What a great repro!! I love how the finish came out and the Santa has a new home!
Re: New Candy Box build
Laurie...
I’m impressed!...looks like it just came from the dime store...you were so fortunate to have the exact Santa...
Howard...
I’m impressed!...looks like it just came from the dime store...you were so fortunate to have the exact Santa...
Howard...
View my Little Glitter House Photo Album
https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipO ... x5Mm9MTFd3
https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipO ... x5Mm9MTFd3
Re: New Candy Box build
Looks great Laurie! Nice work.
Re: New Candy Box build
Great job Laurie! Can you share your method for the stone siding?
Thx!
John
Thx!
John
Re: New Candy Box build
Laurie,
The candy box is wonderful. Like Howard says, it looks like an original straight from the dimestore. I am interested in how you made the stone siding as well. It's a great texture.
Lucy
The candy box is wonderful. Like Howard says, it looks like an original straight from the dimestore. I am interested in how you made the stone siding as well. It's a great texture.
Lucy
Re: New Candy Box build
Wonderful! Like the others, I'm hoping to read how you did the finish.
Re: New Candy Box build
Thanks everyone. The siding is actually very basic. I bought a bag of rough sand(stone) from Hobby Lobby and then I put a batch through a simple metal strainer. I have a few strainers of various size mesh that I buy at thrift shops for a dollar. Decide how thick you want your coating. The grains that fall through the strainer I then put in my morter and pestle. I grind them down a bit, put them through the strainer again and they're ready to go. Then I paint on Alene's white glue, thinned with a bit of water over one side of the house at a time. Sprinkle on the stone, pat it down gently and let it dry. I just paint over the stone when it's dry. I recently saw some finer stone at Hobby Lobby in the silk flower section that probably could just be used as is, but I just grind what I have.
Re: New Candy Box build
Interesting texture. I came up with a neat one. It is white "ballast" sand for a model Railroad. It is pretty fine stuff. So I applied it over a fresh sticky paint job but it was too smooth and regular for me so I applied a bit more paint and some more ballast and got a neat texture more complex that replicates some old finishes. Perhaps that is what the Japanese did?



























