Driftwood and Sea Glass Sunburst
I'm always looking to try something different, I get bored easily! Since I've done driftwood sunburst mirrors in previous posts I wanted to go a different route! What do you find along the beach besides driftwood? Sea glass of course!
The wood was washed in vinegar water and dried, I gathered a pile of sticks that were 6" to 12" for this project. The base was a thin piece of mdf board that was cut was cut out to resemble a donut.
The wood pieces offer different tones, shapes and textures. In fitting them in place I always say its like doing a puzzle, wiggle and twist until it fits! I used a few dabs of hot glue for immediate grip along with Aleene's Tacky glue which was slower to dry but gave extra strength to the attached pieces. I don't use nails, I'm not a lover of seeing the holes they leave.
You'll notice the bare gaps between the sticks? This is where another layer will be fitted into place to hide the back base.
Here's the overall look after one layer of sticks has been glued into place.
So again as the previous directions stated glue with 2 types of glue, one for temporary hold and the other for the permanent grip. To finish off the raw inside edge I glued two layers of large jute rope. I sealed the cut ends with tacky glue to prevent fraying. The sea glass was glued into place with the reliable E6000 glue!
Here it is hanging in a beach themed bedroom, its hung using two Command Hooks for weight over 4 kg. This is fairly heavy piece but its hanging very securely on the wall now!
Here's a closeup of the glass and rope interior, I like the hint of ocean color. By the way this shade was created using white beach glass that I painted with Martha Stewart's frosted glass paint! The other green shades above are found naturally but I wanted blue! So what does a crafter do? They make it happen!
Here is another similar driftwood sunburst but this one has a mirror http://www.hometalk.com/diy/decorate/mirror/d...
We want to help you DIY, so some of the materials in this post are linked to sellers. Just so you know, Hometalk may collect a small share of sales from the links on this page.
Enjoyed the project?
Suggested materials:
- Martha Stewart Glass Paint (Michael's or Amazon)
- Aleene's Tacky Glue (Walmart or Amazon)
- E6000 Glue (Walmart or Amazon)
- Glue gun and glue sticks (Walmart or Amazon)
- Jute Rope (Hardware Store or Amazon)
- Mdf Board (Hardware Store or Amazon)
Comments
Join the conversation
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Pauline Lang on Sep 23, 2017
I love this!!! in the process of making my family room a coastal, beachy look, this will go great!!! Thank you!
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Skilled Thrifty Creatives on Sep 24, 2017It indeed will tie in beautifully, good luck with your room and thank you.
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Elaine on Nov 19, 2017
I‘ve loved interior decorating for as long as I can remember and am pretty fussy when it comes to home-crafted ideas. I like a project to look as high-end and professional as possible. Your lovely mirror fits that category! 😊 You did a really nice job, taking that extra step of concealing the edges of the mirror with rope and beach glass; many crafters skip that vital finishing touch. This is one project I will definitely make after Christmas. Thank you for your post!
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Skilled Thrifty Creatives on Nov 20, 2017Oh Elaine you know me too well already, hahah! I'm a very particular crafter, if I want a piece to display for years and be proud of it has to look the very best that I can make it! Thank-you, thank-you for noticing.
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Elaine on Nov 20, 2017You’re more than welcome! I think we both love creating yet want the finished project to look professional. By the way, I visited your lovely island about 20 years ago. Living in southern Ontario, I have to buy my beach glass but like you, I also have some bottles of Martha Stewart’s Frosted Glass Paint in soft aquas, etc. It looks just great and very realistic on old (clear) bottles that you wish to tint a soft pastel.
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Skilled Thrifty Creatives on Nov 22, 2017That's wonderful, you need to come back now to refresh your memory of our island, iceberg season is a wonderful opportunity to see the extra beauty here. Yes, I agree with using what you have accessible and if that means faking the look with a craft product I say go for it! Thanks for your input Elaine, we do think so much alike!
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Frequently asked questions
Have a question about this project?
This looks great! Where did you get the wood? From the beach?
Where did you get the sea glass? I live near beaches and my sea glass is not such regular shapes.