I took a day off between two big projects and messed around with making a little hearth under my sewing machine table. It's the same table I put an oak chair back into two years ago, to connect and stabilize the legs.
The leather chair seat that I mentioned in that post, by the way, has gone from dull green suede to an impressive polished brown, to dull green rougher suede, under heavy wear from children.
Anyway, I had recently moved a large wooden tray from the top of my dresser onto the oak part, and had put a few awkwardly-shaped things in it, including a half-log that separates to reveal a hidden drawer.
I also recently picked up a small box of veneer bricks from a neighbor's spring clean-out; just the bricks' faces. I knew that I wanted to use them somewhere soon, and that they wouldn't cover a large area.
In the midst of puttering around the house, I was thinking about making a fake fireplace, along the lines of a scrap wood fireplace in the Wary Meyers' Tossed and Found book I reviewed in 2018.
I realized that I had the brick floor, and the log, and the place for it....
The bricks were just enough to line the wooden tray, after breaking a few to fit, with just one tiny piece left over. Some of them were fake-singed, and I put those toward the front.
For a back, I immediately thought of a long metal sign I had picked up from another neighbor's curbside. It has a warm, dark copper color. I bent it into a U shape with the help of an old atlas, by putting one end into the atlas, standing on them, and pulling up on the other end; probably the first time I've ever used a book as a bending brake for metal. It gave me good, straight, rounded bends.
Putting everything together under the table, the sign-back was too tall to fit under the sewing machine compartment, so I rotated the sign forward 90 degrees and made it into a hood instead--which makes more sense, anyway.
I found a few warm-colored firelike objects to go around the log, including some copper and a glass candle holder--which I lined with an upside-down picture of autumn leaves--and a curly piece of birch bark.
There is even a modest amount of warm air coming out of it when the furnace is on, because it's right in front of a vent.
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