Past Work - Teapotty: Cocktail Sticks
Completed teapot The inspiration for this came partly from a hedgehog that I'd made out of cocktail sticks several years ago. I also wanted to create something with a prickly surface to create a contrast with my soft felt teapot and the smooth surface of my wax teapot (not in the display cabinet at present). | ||||
This was my first attempt (which failed). I rolled out some clay into a 15-mm-thick slab and laid it into one of the 2-part plaster moulds I'd already made for creating wax teapots. Then I cut the cocktail sticks in half and poked them point-first into the clay until they hit the plaster. I had to shorten the cocktail sticks in awkward places, like the spout. | ||||
There were a lot of cocktail sticks - a couple of thousand. Laborious work! When I'd finished inserting cocktail sticks in the clay I created another layer of clay to form the hollow inside of the teapot. Then I poured polyethylene resin into the whole thing, as pictured. | ||||
Removing the above from the mould proved difficult - I ended up breaking the mould. Removing the clay from in between the cocktail sticks proved even more of a headache. I had to submerge the whole thing in water and that softened the resin. Lots of cocktail sticks fell out, part of the spout disintegrated, and, well, I abandoned the attempt. | ||||
After a period of "reflection" I mended the broken mould and tried a different approach, pictured. This time, I put a very thin layer of clay in the mould, just sufficient to hold the half-cocktail sticks in place while I bonded the tops together with a hot glue gun. I did this bit by bit - a dozen or so half-cocktail sticks at a time. | ||||
It worked! I decided to abandon the idea of making a "prickly" spout and use "longitudinal" bits of cocktail sticks for this, the handle and the lid. | ||||
I joined the 2 halves of the teapot using Araldite (epoxy glue) so that I had time to adjust things. I glued in extra half-cocktail sticks in gaps and bald patches where some sticks had fallen out. I made the body of the lid by laying bits of cocktail stick end to end around another plaster mould, leaving a hole in the centre. I made the knob on the top by bundling together a bunch of cocktail stick middle sections, which I held together with a Jubilee clip while I glued them. | ||||