The secret to great leaf casts

marc's leaf cast
Castor bean leaf cast.

First I read an uninspiring article in the May/June Fine Gardening (Leaves that last forever).

Then there was Susan’s rant over at Garden Rant (“Quick and easy” concrete leaf castings? You’re kidding, right?) where she wrote: “I’ve produced more than a fool’s share of castings that break, and an even larger number that just look like crap.”

Well let me let you in on a little secret: Vinyl patio patch. You can find it wherever fine construction supplies are sold.

Yes, straight concrete is not strong enough to make delicate leaf casts. But the additives in patio patch make it easier to work with thin and are not nearly so prone to breaking after they are fully cured. If you get the mix at the correct consistency, you don’t get the oozing over the edges that Susan complains about. And what little does ooze over is not difficult to file off.

The patio patch tip came to me from my sister-in-laws boyfriend Marc. (Did I mention his wooden bowls and sculptures make great gifts, and you can order online?) He picked up the technique at an art show where he got to know a woman who makes these for a living. No way would she try to use straight concrete for such a project.

marc's leaf cast

Granted, Marc’s pieces here show his knack for working in three dimensions. My attempts aren’t nearly as good. (Sorry, no pictures handy. Look for a very serviceable bird bath in the yard now from an elephant ear leaf cast in pictures later this summer.) But they beat the heck out of any I’ve tried to do with straight concrete.

Here’s Marc’s elephant ear leaf cast:

marc's leaf cast

marc's leaf cast

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Updates and reruns

Some updates to recent posts …

Minns gate

Cornell Chronicle article on Durand Van Doran’s botanically inspired gate/sculpture outside the building where I work. More pix at my original post.

turfworks flyover by Pete Cadieux

Another Cornell Chronicle article about Turfwork! student project. My original post on this project.

may scan with hard light effect

One more version of my May bloom day scan. Lori over at Gardener of Good and Evil taught me a new PhotoShop trick that drives this scan from antique to something much closer to the actual colors of the flowers. (Long story short: Duplicate layer, multiply. Though with this one I chose hard light which is even closer to the real McCoy.)

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Minns Garden gate by Durand Van Doren

To get to my car after work, there are four ways out of the building where I work that are six of one, half dozen of the other. I usually take the conservatory route for the glimpse of the plants there. But I think I’ll be taking the west exit more often now so I can see the new gate installed today at the west entrance to Minn’s garden:

Minn's garden gate

To appreciate this gate, you’ve got to move in close (more detail shots below):

Minn's garden gate

The gate was designed by Landscape Architecture student Hannah Carlson, and created by artist/blacksmith Durand Van Doren. (See also his Ithaca Art Trail site.) Here’s Durand all spiffed up for today’s dedication.

Minn's garden gate

I barely recognized him from the day I spent with him with my buddies Scott and Marc two years ago, where I learned quickly just how easy an artist like Durand makes it look. (I did manage to make some S-hooks to hang pots.) I borrowed this image from Marc’s website. Go check out his bowls. They make great gifts.

Me, Scott and Durand from Marc's blog

The gate features a dozen garden plants rendered in iron. (Click on images for larger views.) They are actually much blacker than they appear here. I adjusted the images to provide more detail.

What really makes these great is the inclusion of the roots below ground level.

Minns gate detail Minns gate detail Minns gate detail

Minns gate detail Minns gate detail Minns gate detail

Minns gate detail Minns gate detail Minns gate detail

Minns gate detail Minns gate detail Minns gate detail

And a few more close-ups:

Minns gate detail

Minns gate detail

Minns gate detail

Minns gate detail

Minns gate detail

Minns gate detail

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New and improved May bloom day scan

Some folks have commented that they like the old-timey effect of my bloom day scans. That’s not intentional, I assure you. It’s due to using a crummy hand-me-down scanner and not having good imaging software on my home machine.

I took yesterday’s scan to work with me today and adjusted it with PhotoShop to try to get the colors closer to what the flowers actually looked like.

This is an improvement, but the bleeding heart still isn’t near as vibrant as it is in real life.

may bloom day scan redo
Extra large version.

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