January 29, 2010

Foundation work

photo copyright Karin Corbin 2010

I am starting to lay some of the foundation stones. I have created a separate foundation riser structure that the house wall and the floor sit on top of. Makes life a little easier for me being able to work on smaller segments of house and I am less likely to cause damage to work I have already done.. The walls are not yet attached to each other or to the foundation, good old duct tape is holding the corners of the upper structure in place.

Before I lay the stone work I first put on a skim coat of grout over the substrate. That way if I miss getting a good grout fill between the stones it won't be very noticeable as there is a color match. A little missing mortar here and there will look as if the mortar between the stones fell out from the land settling, the timbers sagging or weather related events such as freeze thaw cycles.

My substrate is a tile backer board so putting a skim coat of mortar on it works fine. I like that I can use push pins to hold the stones in place until the Quick Grip brand of glue dries. This glue does grip fast and dries fairly fast. Another advantage is that it dries waterproof which is important when I apply the wet grout between my stone work. I like working with this glue where the object I am adhering has an uneven surface that needs gap filling. These natural stones do not have a truly flat surface on the back side. I can use a coarse carborundum file to flatten areas if needed. You can find those files in the tiling supply stores.

Now I am running out of split stone, that means I will have to open my mini quarry box of stones up and start breaking up the bigger chunks into smaller chunks. You can see why I liked this color of stone for the project it is a nice complement to the timbers. The stone has shades of gray and browns to it as well as subtle blues and green, a little purple too. It might look like a miss match of stone between the area with the sink drain and the foundation but it is not. What you are seeing is that the sink area has had grout on it and it has been scrubbed to remove excess grout. That has removed some of the brown surface oxidation caused by the stones sitting out in the weather for many years. There is iron around in the soils and in the stone, also some algea green and brown and that gets scrubbed off too. But I will later use washes of acrylic paint to put some of those colors back on.

A sand dune landscape will be coming up against the foundation area. I don't have a straight line on the bottom edge of the stone work as I will be creating a loose, windblown, hilly look with sea grass type plants here and there rather than a manicured lawn.

5 comments:

Garden of Miniatures said...

I'm stunning every day when I look at the new pictures.Everything looks so real,can't believe that it is a miniature work.The stones are a highlight to your realistic stucco .
Jeannette

Karin Corbin said...

I think that using real materials that scale down nicely does make things look real. I like illustrations in fairy tale books but I stay far away from things looking like a theme park gone bad.

Richard said...

I' totally in awe of the work you do and how you able to breath life into the miniatures you create, I would love to read more on the weathering techniques you use to age wood and plaster, as well as creating rusted effects. Is it possible for you to post such information or offer links? Thanks again for sharing your skills

Richard, Ontario, Canada

Karin Corbin said...

I use a lot of the aging techniques taught by Noel and Pat Thomas. But I also have a lot of tricks of my own up my sleeve.

But here is the primary tip you need to know, don't use thick paint. Thin the paint down a lot. The thinner it is the less binder there is. That makes it easy to remove paint in worn areas. Also thick paint obscures details such as wood grain and you do want that to show through on a door or window that has lots of weathering.

I am sure you know how important it is to wash your walls before painting as paint won't stick to dirt. Therefore in areas I don't want paint to adhere tightly to I put dirt on first ;-)

Kathi said...

I made some homemade paperclay stones. Thanks again for your tips! I just found this Quick Grip glue. I love it! Can't wait to get started on my stacked stone. :D