Huyze Herkert, morning room: the floor and the fireplace

Victorians installed wall-to-wall carpeting in almost all their rooms. What a filthy affair that must have been! Burning coal fireplaces, streets full of dirt and ash, … and no vacuum cleaner!

Eastlake thought this was an objectionable fashion. He recommended a parquetry border projecting two or three feet from the wall all around with a carpet in between.

Here are some examples he gives:


Exquisite! But far too difficult for a first attempt at making a parquet floor in miniature.

At 23.8 by 26.9 cm my morning room is a small space, so I went for something much simpler: an oak veneer strip floor with a border consisting of two narrow walnut veneer strips. I kept the pattern in the middle section simple as I'm stitching a rug that will cover this part almost completely.


I started by making a template from 1mm thick MDF and cut strips from 15mm wide oak edge banding that I ironed on the MDF. The border is cut from a sheet of walnut veneer and glued on. Each walnut strip is 2mm wide. I didn't take any photos of the process, so here is the result. I gave the floor two coats of natural wood stain and finished it off with a coat of polish wax.


The triangle in the corner is where the fireplace will be placed. The fireplace is made from a combination of 1cm-thick foamboard and 2mm-thick heavy chipboard for the top. I wanted the fireplace to look like it's made of pink marble. I tried to achieve this effect with acrylic paint and varnish. However, my 17-year-old daughter thinks it looks like someone has been slaughtered on it... 😊 She’s kind of right, so I'm not sure yet if I'll keep it this way. I'll wait until the walls are completely finished and reassess it then. I made the hearth out of Fimo clay with a stone effect.

Here too, I didn't take any pictures of the process and can only show you the end result.



It's not much yet, but it's a start! (and it all took much more time than I anticipated!)

Reacties

  1. Wow! What a wonderful start it is! Painting miniature marbleized patterns is tricky and I think you have done beautifully! The Victorians loved an abundance of pattern and decoration and color in their rooms (the exact opposite of contemporary fashion, really) so it will be necessary to have more of the accompanying parts in place before you can really judge the individual pieces accurately. Yes, the "rose marble" might look a bit garish by itself... but pair it with the wood trim and wall coverings and the drapery and it might fade into the background and be "just right" in the end! So don't be too quick to abandon anything as well made as this hearth is! I think it is wonderful! And yes, the truth of making minis is that it is not a quick process.... but that just means we won't soon run out of fun stuff to make! :):):)

    BeantwoordenVerwijderen

Een reactie posten

Populaire posts van deze blog

The background and lay-out of Huyze Herkert

An introduction to Huyze Herkert