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Birdwatcher's Cup of Tea

Settle down with your favorite beverage and peek through the window to watch feathered friends enjoy a treat from colorful cup-and-saucer bird feeders.

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teacups
Whimsical cup-and-saucer
bird feeders with exuberant
painted designs enliven the
garden and serve as feeding
stations for freewheeling birds.
What You Need:
  • Patterns
  • China teacup and saucer
  • Ruler
  • Marking pen
  • Drill and 1/4-inch masonry drill bit
  • Sandpaper (fine-grit)
  • Acrylic paints in colors of your choice
  • Artist's brushes: 1/2-inch flat, #0 liner
  • Flat sponge (to make stamp, if desired)
  • Buttons (if desired)
  • 36-inch-long 1/4-inch threaded metal rod
  • 33-inch-long copper tubing with a 1/4-inch-wide opening
  • 3 stainless-steel nuts with 1/4-inch-wide hole
  • 3 stainless-steel washers with 1/4-inch-wide hole
  • Crafts foam (for spacer)
  • Hole punch
  • Polyurethane clear exterior spray finish
  • Aleene's Platinum Bond Patio & Garden Adhesive
  • Birdseed

pink cup

1. Download the free patterns for this project. (Downloading requires Adobe Acrobat.)

2. Prepare the cup and saucer. Using the ruler and the marking pen, measure and mark the center of the cup and saucer. Carefully drill a hole in the center of both pieces. Sand the surfaces of the cup and saucer to roughen the finish, and wipe or wash off all the dust (this will help the paint adhere). Using the 1/2-inch flat brush, base-coat each piece with acrylic paint; let the paint dry. Repeat with a second coat, if necessary.

3. Paint the designs. Rose and Swirl: Using the patterns and the photographs as a guide, paint free-form shapes in the colors of your choice with the 1/2-inch flat brush. Add details or outline each flower with a contrasting color and the #0 liner brush. Paint the leaves as above; let the paint dry. Spray all surfaces with two coats of clear spray finish. Button Flower: Cut a flower shape from a flat kitchen sponge to make repetitive flower shapes. Wet the sponge and squeeze it dry; and then brush one surface with paint. Press the sponge onto the base-coated surfaces of the cup and saucer to create the design. Add outlines and details with the #0 liner brush; let the paint dry. Paint the leaves as above.

4. Glue buttons to the centers of the flowers. Spray all surfaces with two coats of polyurethane clear finish.


cup and saucer

5. Assemble the bird feeder. Note: Make spacers by cutting circles from crafts foam and punching holes in the center (see photo). See the Assembly Diagram on the pattern for the order in which to add the individual parts. Insert the threaded metal rod through the copper tubing. Place a nut at one end of the metal rod but do not tighten it until all pieces are assembled. At the other end of the rod, place a nut and a washer, then a foam spacer. Next, place the drilled saucer, then a large circle of crafts foam cut to the same diameter as the bottom of the cup. Place the teacup on the threaded rod, then a foam spacer, a metal washer, and finally, the metal nut. Carefully tighten the nuts on the end to create a firm fit. Push the rod into the soil and fill the teacup with birdseed.


Continued on page 2:  Bumblebee Trim

 

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