Showing posts with label bottleneck glass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bottleneck glass. Show all posts

Friday, October 8, 2010

Mosaic Note Cards

This week at Water Candy, we have been working with paper again, and making mosaic note cards! Thanks, Tiffany, for the idea! We love to make mosaics, and have done countertops, tiles, trivets, and mirrors, all out of a mix of sea glass and recycled glass.

We wanted to reinterpret the "real thing" as a little more abstract, so we photographed a few of our favorites, and redesigned them as paintings . They were printed on vellum, and overlaid on a textured ivory cardstock. This helps to preserve the dimensional feel of the original mosaic.

These three started from the same mosaic, a multi colored free-form design we did on a trivet.


The octopus


and the starfish were both tiles that we did for a custom order, so we don't have them anymore, but thankfully we photographed them first!


These look so cute in the studio, the perfect mix of glass and paper, and what a nice way to send someone a little bit of the Caribbean!

In other news, we are amassing quite a collection of Jagermeister bottles from the bars ( we love our Jager here!) and we're not sure what to do with them...they are not quite right for drinking glasses, they are a little short for lamps, but they have a great color and we love the raised lettering...any suggestions?
Thanks for stopping by, and come visit the studio soon!




Friday, September 24, 2010

Water Candy Sushi


This week in Tillett Gardens, the Chamber of Commerce met for it's monthly Business After Hours, a networking and socializing event that is hosted by a different location each month. All of the shops here were open, and we all provided some sort of light appetizer.

We wanted to stay within theme, so we made Water Candy Sushi! This was a fun recipe that was found on the Mommy Knows blog http://www.mommyknows.com/birthday-party-candy-sushi/

We didn't document the process with photos, (because hers are so good)...and we're glad we didn't...up to our elbows in butter! If anyone wants to try this, truly, you can't use enough butter.
You begin by melting butter and marshmallows, then stirring in rice krispies. Instead of putting them in a pan, they are spread out thin on buttered wax paper. We cut them into rectangle sections, and laid 2 gummy worms end to end, and then two more on top. Butter your hands, and very gently roll the rice krispies over the worms one turn, and cut the roll off of the rectangle. We let them chill for a while, then rolled unwrapped fruit roll ups around them.

We let them chill until the event, then sliced them in the studio. How cute!


We made some as rolls, and some nigiri style, a little mound of rice krispies topped with a sliced candy orange, and wrapped with a strip of the roll up.

They weren't too hard to make, and if you don't mind smelling like butter and marshmallows for days after, it's a very clever idea. Husband says "Never again", though!

We also finished up a few projects around the studio for the event:
Pink stripes painted on the door,


we weren't sure if it would be TOO cute, but our friend Tiffany assured us that you can never be too cute!

Flip flop sea glass mosaic stepping stones for outside,


And husband finished his bottle garden! He put a couple of inches of wet concrete in a cardboard box, sliced the bottles at an angle, and buried the whole thing when it was dry. I love this because it catches everyone's eye that walks by, and it can either be seen as bottles growing out of the sand,


or as flower vases!


What a great way to "grow" flowers...you can change the flowers anytime!

The event was mostly after dark, so two lamps were hung outside...


this one is three feet long!

Finally, a special event called for a special necklace. This is made from recycled bottle neck slices and Swarovski crystals.


Thanks for stopping by, and visit the studio soon!

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Rasta Lamp

Water Candy loves anything candy colored...brights or pastels, subtle or dramatic, and most of our work reflects this! We also LOVE custom orders for anything that we do, and sometimes this takes us outside of our candy box! We just finished a lamp for our client, ILove, that wanted Rasta colors...red, gold, and green. Our search for the perfect paper and colors was futile on the island. Luckily, we spent Labor Day weekend with the family in North Carolina and got to go to Michaels (I would trade Kmart here for a Michaels in a heartbeat)!! We found the perfect papers with the rich, bold colors that we were seeking.


We wanted to learn a little bit more about the Ratsa colors, and this is what we found out! According to Wikipedia and several other websites, the red symbolizes the blood of martyrs (or Africans), the gold the wealth of Africa (or stolen gold), the green the vegetation and beauty of Africa (or lost lands). These colors were used on the Ethiopian flag as early as 1798...with red on top, gold in the middle, and green on the bottom.


In a state ceremony around this time, however, the flag was accidentally flown upside down, and this pattern was adopted by the Ethiopian government and it is now commonplace to see green on the top and red on the bottom...we took creative license and did green-gold-red-gold-green!

We love the way the Rasta lamp turned out, and most importantly, so does ILove!

In other studio news this week, we just finished a collection of keychains in sea glass


and bottleneck glass


...keep these in mind for cute stocking stuffers in just a few months!

We also took the "paper paint" process from our nautical lanterns (see last post) and applied them to candle holders...so pretty when lit!


We are saving some to put tea lights or votives in, and giving some to our candle making friend George to wax and wick directly.


These are made from cut wine and liquor bottles that we didn't use for our glassware line...no glass goes to waste here at Water Candy!


Save those bottles- we take all donations!!