In the photo below, you can see that the frame and the moon cutout in the top half of the shadowbox are raised to give the sky dimension. The bottom frame is flush to the back to provide more room for the tiny cigar box and jars of stars. The half circle on top of the shadowbox is an old wooden wheel from a set of block, cut in half.
That's a big jar for a pixie to fill! Luckily, there are plenty of stars in the sky.
Here are a few details. There's already one star in the jar, and our little friend is getting ready to add another.
And here's his collection: some wishing stars, one very special lucky star, and a bottle of dreams with a star stopper. There's also a box of large stars for those who need them most.
The jars and box are very tiny!
A few notes on construction: here's the tiny box before assembly. I found it easiest to cover the pieces with paper before gluing them together. It might be easier yet to assemble and then paint. Using a lightweight paper really helps, because those pieces are really, really small, and folding a heavy paper over the edges would be difficult.
Here you see the box with only one side and the bottom attached. The upper frame is elevated from the back of the box using two adhesive foam squares to raise the frame. The moon was attached with one foam square.
A hanger for the back, and a photo of how the top star is adhered. Because that star is actually a bead, there's a hole through the middle. I adhered a long head pin to the back of the wooden piece, and bent it up and over. I dropped the star down onto the pin, and put a little dab of glue on the two points of the star that sit on the block. Now it's nice and secure.
Keep reaching for the stars. For a complete list of supplies, click here!
Oh My Stars, YES. This hits all my Happy Buttons. Beautiful work!
ReplyDeleteThis is so sweet! I love tiny things so much! But I'm afraid the link directing me to the supplies isn't working. It takes me to a photo. I'd really appreciate the list! Rebeccacell@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteThanks for bringing that to my attention, Rebecca! The link is correct now.
DeleteThis is wonderful! I had no idea how small it was till you showed it in your hand! My word! How ever did you work so tiny??
ReplyDeleteGreat piece Kristin!
Jackie