| |

Moving memorabilia

For years, my parents combined their stained glass and woodworking talents to sell many products, but mosaic glass trays were their bread and butter product. Their trays tended to target serving 2 cups of coffee and snacks, or a full dinner meal. You can see some of their original designs at sawdustandglass.com/tray/. As they’ve begun to wind down their days setting up at craft shows throughout the greater Kingston area, I started to think how my combination of tools and preferred materials could put a new spin on this concept.

The result in this turn/combination is a neighbourhood tray series custom designed for Serge Papineau Real Estate to offer as a piece of moving memorabilia to his newest customers. The map in each tray aims to cover the walkable/bikeable areas for the new home buyer and make for a lovely conversation piece. If you’re in the market for a new home, buy with Serge and you could get a tray that will help you discover your new neighbourhood.

Mark Twain

How it was made

A few of the final steps in the process that didn’t get photographed (which were also the messiest ones):

  • Sanding the epoxy to 320 grit for a matte effect vs the epoxy glossy shine. I went back and forth on different approaches where I might be able to finish the inside of the tray before gluing into the frame (easier to sand the corners, but less of a seal between epoxy / frame edges).
  • Putting the final finish – Rubio Monocoat – on all parts of the frame, back and epoxy.
Name(Required)

Similar Posts

  • |

    A punderful bookmark

    The customer for this fiery bookmark found puns to be a caustic form of humour. But their partner never found a pun they wouldn’t chuckle at. So they asked to cook up a bookmark that would celebrate their love for puns, reading and camping. What s’more do you need to know?

  • | |

    Big sound on a smaller budget

    With 11′ tall walls in a split level home, there really was no choice whether the home theatre would have projector or not. But figuring out the right way to have big sound to match in a small footprint and a not-so-big budget was interesting project to tackle.

  • | | | | | |

    Zelda: Breath of the Wild table

    Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars. This project was filled with so many mediums and opportunities to stretch my skills that it’s easily one of my most reference projects when someone asks what an ambitious Idealien Studios project looks like.

  • | | | |

    DND GM screens to die for

    The use case of wooden free-standing screens for a tabletop RPG may be niche, but this project was an exciting opportunity to push my tools/skills. The grain-matching inlays, backfilling routed lines with epoxy and blending laser etchings over top from it are ones I’m excited to use on more projects in the future.

  • | |

    Live-edge breakfast bar

    You definitely want a bright/light kitchen environment, but too much white can leave it feeling sterile. This walnut breakfast bar provides the right splash of earth tones to liven up the room that is most often a hub of activity and flavours.

  • | |

    Hex-A-Deck

    The deck consultant from the nearest (orange) big box store sai “Everything you are thinking of is structurally sound, but it flies in the face of hundreds of years of engineering principles.”

    With Jim Carrey’s, “So you’re telling me there’s a chance” echoing in my head, I began an ambitious hex-a-deck building adventure.