My friend Ellen suggested I make miniature avocados, so yesterday I played around and made a little Mexican appetizer for the Mouse House.
I built clay bowls and filled one with red, green and white pieces in a slurry of liquid red and translucent polymer for the pico de gallo. The second bowl was filled with tortilla chips made from thin clay that was texturized with a bit of brown paint on a toothbrush then cut into small triangles. The final bowl was filled with a mix of light green clay and liquid polymer. Once baked and painted with glossy medium it looks just like guacamole.
The avocados were made with light green clay, texturized on the outside, then baked. They were then painted with dark green paint and a tiny brown pit of clay was added to one of the halves.
Finally, the bottles were made with brown and translucent clay, then painted with orange liquid polymer. A lime segment tops them off.
So Ellen, we need to set a date for a Mexican lunch when I’m back in Michigan!
The last couple of days I’ve tackled some basic salad ingredients in miniature: tomatoes, cucumbers and lettuce.
After my struggles with the apples, the tomatoes were easy. I mixed bright red and translucent clay, shaped it into balls, cut the “star” shapes on top, then inserted green clay into the stems. (I added longer stems and leaves to a few of them as well.)
After baking, I glazed them with gloss medium. I made sure they varied in size and added cherry and green tomatoes to mix it up a bit.
The cucumbers took a bit longer as I assembled another cane (similar to the orange slices) so I could have pieces as well as whole vegetables. I made the cane with green and natural translucent clay. (The picture below shows how it was built before I wrapped it in green clay.) Once I rolled it into a log I cut slices that looked like cucumber pieces with seeds. I made lots of these slices, but also cut longer pieces of the cane and pinched the ends closed to make whole cucumbers. Then I used my old toothbrush to add grooves and dimples into these pieces and dabbled them with dark green and yellow paint so they would look realistic. The big picture below shows what they looked like before baking.
The results were pretty good. I wanted the slices to be more translucent– perhaps they were overbaked?
The lettuce was easy. I spread a thin sheet of dark green clay in a fondant mold I picked up at the Goodwill yesterday for one dollar. Once this sloppy and raw edged clay was baked, I just broke it into little pieces.
For fun I threw these pieces into a miniature bowl and added cherry tomatoes and cucumber slices to make a salad. When I sent a picture of it to Andy at work he thought we were having that salad for dinner!
I thought apples would be easy to make. Ha! I tried at least four different techniques and am still not completely satisfied. I’m going to say they are done for now, but I’ll continue to experiment when I have more time.
The image above shows my first attempt. I used white clay and dry chalk. I don’t like the rotten looking centers and I see fingerprints all over them.
I used translucent clay and wet chalk on my second attempt. I liked the way they looked before baking, but once “cooked” the translucent clay made the results look like orange tomatoes.
The third try was awful. I used a mix of white and translucent clay and painted them with acrylic paint. The paint was gummy and a mess before I baked them and it almost disappeared after they came out of the oven. Yuck!
I finally decided to use clay and no other coloring techniques. I carefully made balls of mostly red and some green and yellow and coaxed the colors to “streak” like the colors in real apples.
I think these look pretty good. I wish the color streaks were more prominent but they will work for my purposes–until I decide to try again. Fun note: I used pine needles outside our apartment in CA for the stems.
Boy, am I glad making miniature food does not require a significant amount of materials! I have sculpted many fruits and vegetables over and over and thrown out so much. I do see some improvement in each rendition, so that’s good, but it’s always hard to give up on a piece and try again.
Practice, practice, practice!
Anyway…here are my most recent oranges.
I made them by building a “cane” out of the clay so the inside of each of the oranges is realistic.
Achieving realistic colors can be difficult–lots of trial and error when combining clay.After mixing the color for the interior of the oranges, I shaped the clay into a disc shape and added the white “pith” in sections.When I completed the orange sections, I wrapped white clay around the disc to complete the “pith”.The orange peel was added last. I wrapped a piece of orange clay around the disc then carefully pinched it together to eliminate all spaces and air bubbles.
Once the disc was free of spaces and air bubbles, I shaped it into a long log by continuing to squeeze, stretch and roll. This part is tricky as it is easy to distort the disc and alter the interior. The photos below illustrate this.
This cane was rolled unevenly as one section of the orange peel is too thick.A couple of canes later I had one that was fairly uniform.
To make the orange slices I simply cut very thin slices of the cane. Trial and error taught me to let the cane sit overnight or put it in the refrigerator for awhile so my blade wouldn’t squish and distort the image as I cut it.
A slice of orange — ready to stick on a mini mimosa!
To make whole oranges I cut about a quarter of an inch from the cane and carefully pinched the peel together on both cut ends. After rolling this into a ball, I added some pastel chalk with a brush to add depth of color, then stuck a teeny tiny piece of green on the stem side of the orange.
Pastel chalks added hints of other colors to each orange.Just a tiny bit of green created the stem.
Finally, I added texture to the peels with a toothbrush then baked the oranges in the oven for 15 minutes to harden the clay.
I know it would have been easier to just roll the orange clay into balls instead of building the canes, but I love the idea that the inside of the oranges are realistic as well. I cut many more slices than pictured, so I’m sure there will be plates of these somewhere other than the kitchen in the Mouse House!
It has been a long time since I’ve posted. My husband’s transfer to Southern California stalled my progress on the Mouse House as I’ve been living most of the time in our Tustin, CA apartment rather than our house in Michigan. I have a desk in our apartment (with a wonderful view!) but most of my art supplies are in Michigan, so I’ve been limited with how I use the space. I did a lot of sewing (five art quilts) this past year, but I miss constructing the Mouse House! I finally decided to just “bite the bullet” and I bought polymer clay and new sculpting tools and am learning how to make miniature food while I’m out west.
I am very lucky to have this beautiful space in California to work on all my creative endeavors. I just wish I had the Mouse House and all of my supplies here as well!
The Mouse House has a kitchen, a pantry, a kitchen loft and a dining room I want to fill with realistic food I make myself. I jumped right in trying to sculpt without instructions (a habit of mine!), yet my awkward results indicated I needed help. I spent time reading books on sculpting and discovered the incredible video resources on YouTube. I’m now spending these (strangely!) rainy California days making tiny food over and over. Practice, practice, practice.
I made grapes the last couple of days while the Santa Ana winds blew sheets of rain outside my window. Here’s how I did it:
I mixed polymer clay until I achieved the desired color for the stems .I rolled the clay until it was very thin then cut it into small pieces.Using tweezers, I stuck these pieces together so they resembled grape stems.The clay stems were then baked for about five minutes in the oven.I applied brown acrylic paint on sections of the baked stems so they looked more realistic.These are the baked and painted stems.It took quite awhile to mix the clay until I achieved the desired “grape” colors. I made three clumps of slightly different purples so the grapes would not be uniform.I rolled thin logs and cut them into grape sized portions.The grapes : three colors rolled into tiny balls.I used this adhesive to glue the unbaked clay grapes to the baked stems.Meticulous work!The purple grapes, ready to bake.Ten minutes in the oven.I added very small amounts of colored chalk to the baked grapes to make them more realistic .The final step was to add a glossy glaze.Ta da! Here are the finished grapes. (I made green ones as well.)The polymer clay green grapes. The clay grapes ready to go into the Mouse House .
I have practiced making lots more fruits and vegetables as well as several entrees. Each time I make an item it looks more realistic, so I’ll keep working. Stay tuned!