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| I saw this cheap-o plastic bird bath at the store a few weeks ago and thought that it would make the perfect mould for a bird bath. As you can see it worked fantastic.
I had a few old dishes from the "Blue Willow"? series so I decided to use them and make a mosaic. The one with the round plate has been sanded and cleaned up. The oval plate still needs a bit of clean-up. I used portand cement one part to three parts sand. I reinforced the stand with metal and chicken wire. It was my first attempt at making anything in concrete so I hope it works out. It is still slowing curing in this damp weather. This is the plastic bird bath that I used for the mould. I used my rotary tool and just cut along the seems to take apart at the end.
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Follow-Up Postings:
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| That is so pretty! |
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| Such a wonderful job! K. Anne |
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- Posted by CramItWitWalnutsUgly z7 MD (My Page) on Fri, May 28, 04 at 2:35
| They're great, I don't really understand how you did it though. I'd love to know. |
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| It is really wonderful! I would love more detailed instructions also....and is the mold reusable? Love your use of the willow plates! Thanks for sharing! ann |
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| Beautiful, fantastic, fun, fancy, VERY NICE! Thanks for showing us! |
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| I'm new in this website. Your birdbath is really great. I have one of those plastic birdbaths. Could you give me more detailed instructions on how you did this? Is there a site anywhere that tells how? Would appreciate the help. Would love to make a beautiful birdbath like yours. Thanks, Sharon |
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| that's really nice! it gives me ideas... thanks for sharing! |
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- Posted by JoyceVallee z8 canada west (My Page) on Fri, Jun 4, 04 at 2:34
| Thank you for your generous words. I am sorry to take so long in getting back to the forum. Although this may look somewhat complicated, it is anything but. I simply bought the plastic bird bath approx $7.00. It is screwed together in two pieces. Simply remove the screws and you will have the top bowl and the bottom pedestal. I noticed that there is a hole in the bottom of the pedestal and there is a plug for it. I guess you could remove this if you wanted to put a pipe through and make it into a fountain. Anyway I just left the plug in so the cement would not leak out the bottom. I had some scrap iron, (a piece of re-bar) which I wrapped with some chicken wire. This was just for extra strength. I don't really think it needed it but I am no expert so I did it anyway. I then mixed the cement: I used 1 part portland cement to three parts sand since I wanted a nice smooth finish. I started to fill the pedestal about 1/4 of the way, then tapped it to make sure all the little air pockets were filled. I then proceeded to put the metal bar wrapped in chicken wire into the pedestal and added and another 1/4 of cement, tapping it down as before. I added another two 1/4 until it was full. The top was a lot easier. I simply filled the bowl with the cement mixture about 1/2" and placed some chicken wite on top of that. I then put in another 1/2' or so and tapped it down. I pushed the plate into the center of the bowl. While the cement was still wet I pushed the other pieces into place. I let both pieces dry for about 5 days, but it didn't need that long. To open the pedestal I just used a rotary tool and cut along the seams.It worked very well. The top I just turned over and flipped out. The top has a nice smooth flat bottom. The plastic mold had a piece of plastic that acted as a ring that sat over-top of the pedestal. I made a similar concrete rim using two round flat bottom dishes of different sizes. (Envision something that looks like a deep dish pie pan). I poured the cement into the larger one about half full. I then set the smaller one inside that and weighted it down with a heavy stone. I let this cure for a few days and then cemented it to the centre of the bottom of the top. (Does that make sense??) Anyway your bird-bath ends up in two pieces which makes it nice for moving around. For finishing I used a rotary tool with a sanding attachment to smooth edges that may be rough from the pieces of broken glass. Please be sure to do this as I found that as soon as someone looks at it they want to run their fingers across the pieces of glass (Go figure). Anyway, I hope these directions are fairly clear, if they aren't give me a shout on the email. Remember this is just one of my first projects so if anyone sees something that I've done wrong please let me know. I am a big girl. I can take it. :-( The moulds are definitely re-usable. You will be left with two halfs of the pedestal but that is not really a problem. Just pour the two halfs and cement together. I have made a few by now and I actually did it both ways. I bought another mould since it was so cheap and I also did it using the two halfs. Both worked well. Please look under "garden accoutrements" to see a final picture of it painted and set up in our garden. Thank you for your time.
Good Luck!!!
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