"Forest Flora" custom mosaic series

Do you remember, early in the pandemic, when the government sent checks to help us hold out through those strange and frightening times? And do you remember the discussion that it was up to us to support the small businesses we valued, like book stores and hair stylists, to make sure they lasted?

This series is an example of one couple deciding artists were the ones they wanted to support with that check they received. Their regular income continued uninterrupted and they viewed that check as a bonus. By using those funds to purchase work from artists (aka small business owners) they could both enjoy that art in their home for years to come, as well as help ensure those businesses carried on into the future.

As the recipient of a commission from this couple, this work was welcome income during those fraught days. It was also meaningful to us, as artists and as a company, to know we were valued in that way. And in the days when we were restricted to our own homes and yards, it provided an opportunity to find respite in the great outdoors we so love from the safety of a computer.

The patrons of this set are natives of the eastern United States. In moving to the Midwest, they had discovered an appreciation for the prairie environment. But they had also found they were missing the forests of their childhoods and early years as a couple. The goal of this series was to create a tactile and visual reminder of those woods.

The first piece in the series, “Into the Forest,” is the largest. Johannah wanted to convey both the cool darkness at the forest floor as well as the bright green chaos and light looking up through the tops of a trees. This piece is created in Mexican and gold smalti in a raw maple frame.

The next three pieces are progressively smaller. With these pieces, we wanted to represent native plants and fungi found on the forest floor, specifically a mushroom, a flower, and a fern. Johannah and the clients chose the bright orange Cantharellus cinnabarinus mushroom, red and yellow Eastern Columbine flowers, and Ebony spleenwort for the fern. These pieces were created from hand-cut stained glass set in tinted black mortar, in a style inspired by a previous series depicting endangered flowers.

Forged Steel and Mosaic Custom Garden Sculpture

If you know us at all, you maaay have noticed combining our skills to create mosaic and steel collaborations is one of our very favorite things to do. Can we tell you just how thrilled we were when this client approached us to create a custom garden sculpture in both forged steel and mosaic?

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We based the design for this sculpture around native Virginia plants such as arrowroot, cat tails, pickerelweed, and ferns. Kyle created an organic design incorporating simple geometric shapes to represent the leaves and flowers. In the first step to bring this sculpture to life, Kyle and his team forged the steel framing and organic forms. Next Johannah made the mosaics to fill in the geometric shapes. The mosaics were made on mesh then transferred into the sculpture, glued in place, and finally grouted.

You can see photos of the sculpture installed in the garden below, as well as a few close-up details of the mosaics and forged organic forms.

Steel and mosaic collaboration garden sculpture PH2020 (1).JPG

Forged Steel and Mosaic Fireplace Cover Collaborations

This client approached us in need of decorative fireplace covers. Not a fire screen, the steel-and-mesh screen set in front of the fireplace to prevent sparks and embers from getting out. No, this client wanted something decorative yet functional to completely cover the fireplace. They live in an older home with a total of seven, SEVEN! fireplaces. Though they use some of them, most are not in regular use. The benefit of movable decorative covers over something more permanent is they still have the option of easily using the fireplaces down the road.

In a startling coincidence, it turns out we had made a sign bracket for this home many years ago for the previous owners. In light of that coincidence we incorporated the cat tail design of the bracket in one of the fireplace covers. That cover went in a room with a large painting of a tree over the fireplace, so we used colors from the painting in the mosaic inlay surround.

For the second cover, the main design concern was to brighten up an otherwise rather dark room. For that fireplace we went with a similar design to the cat tails, this time in gold and bright white mosaic inlay. You can see a few photos of the works in progress below, as well as images of the final pieces installed in the client’s home.

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