lblanchard: (swannfountain)
[personal profile] lblanchard
I bought this cardinal a very long time ago -- twenty years, perhaps. It's a souvenir of one of our many trips along the Blue Ridge Parkway. It never became a favorite ornament, because I discovered it was far too heavy for the branches of a real tree and it doesn't look so great as a freestanding objet. It's made of some kind of composition, hollow, to look like rough-carved wood. It does well as partially-obscured color on the inner branches of the bogus tree, but I've often thought about deaccessioning it.

While packing my ornaments this year, I dropped it, tail first, on the concrete floor. Several pieces of its carapace shattered, and what was left of the tail reminded me of a lobster claw after the nutcracker had been at it. I couldn't find all the pieces and was about to dump it in the trash -- after all, I never really really liked it -- when I recalled that I had had a similar catastrophe on one of a pair of cardinals that I also bought along the Blue Ridge Parkway. I accidentally broke one guy's beak off and fabricated a new nose out of cardboard, Elmer's Glue and paint. Now I can't tell the original beak from the replacement beak. Could I do the same thing with this one?, I wondered. It was a challenge.

I brought it upstairs, glued back the bits I had and then filled in the missing bits by building up layer upon layer of Elmer's. Once I'd finished, I applied several coats of acrylic paint to the broken tail, followed by a very thin wash of metallic gold. (For an explanation of why I have all these paints just hanging around the house see granddaughter / crafts.)  It doesn't quite match the rest of the piece -- you can see one of the seams on the tip of the tail, and the reflectivity of the repainted area is higher. With my 20/20 hindsight I'd give it another coat of red paint and smudge it while it was still tacky. But this is good enough:


And behold, the alchemy of repair. I feel as though the act of restoration was also an act of nurture and this is now more than a possession -- it just became a rescue. I find myself addressing it as "little buddy," which is a name I also occasionally give to The Scamp, as in "come on, little buddy, let's get you packed up for the year." I guess I'm stuck with it now.

Date: 2014-01-11 08:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pondhopper.livejournal.com
It looks great and if you hadn't explained exactly what and where and how you repaired it, I'd never be able to tell it had broken.

Yup, you're stuck with it now.

Date: 2014-01-11 09:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lblanchard.livejournal.com
I can see the difference in the texture, especially in the areas I built back up with Elmer's. Smooth rather than a bit nubbly. And, yeah, I'm stuck with it.

Nice cardinal on your userpic. How many of those things do you have, anyhow?

Date: 2014-01-11 09:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pondhopper.livejournal.com
How many user pics? I am allowed 122 uploaded to LJ and the number keeps growing...but I have a permanent account. And a file FULL of reserve pics that I need to start using. Maybe this will be the year of the Great Icon Overhaul!

Date: 2014-01-12 02:25 am (UTC)
pameladean: chalk-fronted corporal dragonfly (Libellula julia)
From: [personal profile] pameladean
I momentarily misread that you had said, "Let's get you packed up for the year" to The Scamp, and wondered what cat-storage methods you had.

P.

Date: 2014-01-12 03:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lblanchard.livejournal.com
None, alas.

Also...The Scamp appears to have killed and eaten his Christmas present, which was a felt cat toy.

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