Viewing post #1905061 by DoghouseRiley

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Feb 8, 2019 5:22 PM CST
"The Tropic of Trafford" (in (Zone 8a)
Japanese Maples Roses Region: United Kingdom
When I built our koi pool thirty years ago. I decided I wanted a Japanese lantern. I didn't like the ones available in garden centres as they either looked "stylised," of poor quality, or very expensive.

I wanted something that looked like "the real thing."

Like this one at the Katsura Imperial Villa in Japan, many hundreds of years old.

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So I decided to make one.

These constructions were made in my garage, of ready mixed fine concrete with an outer layer of sand and cement with added yellow dye to achieve a similar colour to our York stone patio. The cost was ridiculously cheap.

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The molds for each section were placed on a large piece of Contiplas so they did not stick. The base of the first lamp was made in a wooden former, (not shown) built up in layers with the mortar forced down the side of the concrete, a steel rod was inserted in the middle to centre the first "table."

I rounded off the corners with a file before it had completely gone off. The apertures in the sides of the windows were made from the plastic tubs shown. An ice cream tub was used to make a recess in the top to hold the lamp. The crown was made in situ as I kept the concrete and mortar only barely damp. (same consistency as you'd use to make a kid's sandcastle).

The second was more adventurous, a steel tube up the centre of the column carries the electric cable. A piece of weldmesh reinforces the front window. Each lamp took only a few hours to cast and mold. The passing years have had an unplanned authentic looking "weathering effect" on the outer mortar skin, simulating centuries of wear on real stone.

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Both lamps are illuminated by recycled 12v pool lamps

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The 6ft pagoda required seventeen molds, the veranda rails are of hardwood beading. It took me just under two weeks to complete, but only working a couple of hours each evening after work.

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Here's a bit more detail. As the outer skin is only mortar, the only way I could get a bit of detail, it has weathered a bit over the last thirty years, but it gets a coat of paint every five yeas which helps protect it.
It's had one since I took this photo.


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The simulated pin joints that supported the roofs can only be seen from below, but I was striving for authenticity, if only in concrete.

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I made the sorin from assortment of recycled drilled out brass cupboard handles, the top of a shaving foam canister, milk carton tops, a plastic stake, in which I drilled a lot of holes, a long threaded bolt, two nuts and a couple of beads

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"I don't mind if you don't like my manners, I don't like 'em myself. They're pretty bad. I grieve over them on long winter evenings." (Philip Marlowe to Vivian Rutledge).
Last edited by DoghouseRiley Feb 8, 2019 5:56 PM Icon for preview

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