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I am very fond of this beetroot which I made at Olivers studio. The leaves are broken tile which helps gives texture to the leaves, the ribs and body are a mixture of Smalti and glass tile. The background spirals rounds from the shadow with the tiles graduating out in size from the centre.
This running hare was commissioned by a friend as a present for her husband. the materials used are vitreous glass and ceramic tiles. The ceramic gives a flatter colour giving a contrast in
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The larger you make your mosaic, the easier it is to get fine detail using a general tile size of 1cms square. The hare is about 35 cms square and it was easy to get a good flow to the lines.
Here is an angel fish which I made as I had some sea glass I wanted to incorporate in the watery backgro
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I find the easiest way to make the mosaics is on an mdf board which is sealed with watered down pva glue. The finished pictures are easy to handle and can be hung on the wall with mirror plates or just propped up on a mantlepiece. Tiles are stuck down with pva and when completely dry, grouted. Don't use ready mixed grout unless the surface of your mosaic is very flat as it is quite gloopy and difficult to get into crevices. Grey or sandy coloured grout gives a much more pleasing finish especially when using natural subjects.
I am currently working on a large Dodo which has turned out pleasingly quirky. I have incorporated some ceramic tiles I made to resemble feathers using terracotta and tin glaze stamped with an old printing block - I'll put up some photos soon.
Warning: making mosaics is a seriously addictive past-time.
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