Tag Archives: shed

Monique’s Woodsy Backyard Retreat

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Monique’s backyard is tucked away behind her Del Ray rowhouse, a woodsy retreat, with a gate boasting a welcoming wrought-iron sunflower. And if you need to announce your arrival, you can pull the chain on the bell adjacent to the door.

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Once inside, you feel you’ve left the city and entered a serene and artistic oasis, decorated tastefully with a collection of bells, wind chimes, and statues.

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Just inside the gate, a lilac bush gives off a deliciously floral scent.

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Here is another dignified sculpture that I’m sure is even more arresting against a backdrop of vines in full bloom. (Our visit occurred early in the spring season.)

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In the far right corner, Monique has created a pleasant seating area.  The meandering borders and the bench on an angle tricks you into thinking the garden may be larger than it is.

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A whimsical mobile hung high helps to break up the view between Monique’s back fence and the apartment building just behind her.

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One of the most unexpected and lovely features in Monique’s yard is her pergola covered with mature wisteria vines.

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Here is the wisteria bud, one of many that adorn the pergola throughout the summer months.

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Right about now, Monique’s peonies should be blooming as well. She has a big peony bush at the foot of the steps to her back deck.

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I’m in love with her shed. It’s so beautifully enveloped in the maple branches and dappled with shade, you’d easily forget, once again, that you’re mere blocks away from Del Ray’s main street.

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The front of the shed repeats the sunflower motif.

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And Monique keeps a water barrel on one side to fill with run-off from the shed’s angled roof.

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A stone turtle in mid-step on the deck looks almost real.

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And the red pepper door handle is a perfect touch for the screen door that leads to Monique’s kitchen from the deck. She’s offered to show us her entire home soon. And when we do, I’ll return to the garden to show the wisteria and other vines and flowers in full summer bloom as well.

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Studio Tour: Local Ceramicist in Her Shed Turned Studio

I had the thrill of touring Graciela Testa Lynt’s ceramics studio in her Alexandria home. She handed me a mug of steaming coffee in a handmade mug and we walked out back to see her charming shed turned studio.

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It’s in this small studio space, packed to the brim, where Graciela expresses her passion and enormous talent working with clay.

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Note the ceramic bird houses, which ironically are less desirable to birds than the shed itself, where a Carolina wren made her nest last May. After the birds hatched, Graciela held off on firing 20 yarn bowls until they learned to fly.

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About Graciela

Graciela first learned to make pottery in 1992 when she was raising five children, had a full-time job, and needed to find a way to stay centered. When she retired, she began making, exhibiting, and selling pottery in earnest. Graciela has a store on Etsy and you can buy from her locally at a few locations, all listed on her Web site. In 1997, she moved from a space in her basement out to this 10×12 foot shed, which just got a fresh coat of red paint.

Here is where Graciela showed me the step-by-step process for making one of her signature (and top selling) yarn bowls.

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Even though she considers the shed a one-person space with everything within reach, she patiently let me hover and take photos and notes as she worked.

An Ergonomic Studio Space

Graciela has everything set up ergonomically. She uses a step ladder for two purposes — as a cushion-topped seat at the wheel and as a ladder to reach the shelves. She has a rolling cart that holds all of her throwing tools.

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An old linoleum countertop serves as temporary counterspace. It goes over the slab roller when she’s not using it. And her husband installed an old sink outside the studio with a hose coming from the house, so she doesn’t have to tramp into the house for water.

Graciela buys a smooth white porcelaneous stoneware clay which comes in 25 lb. bags. Near her boxes of clay, she stores discarded pieces and then uses a pugmill, a recent gift from her husband, to mix recycled pieces with new. The clay comes out of the pugmill in long tubes like this.

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Clay costs about .45 cents a pound and is available from local pottery supply stores, such as Manassas Clay.

Stage 1: Wedging and Throwing

Graciela begins the process of making a yarn bowl by wedging the clay, which is akin to kneading dough. In this case, though, you want to get the air out rather than adding air to the mixture.

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Once the piece is on the wheel, she figures out how wide she wants the bowl to be. She needs to make sure she leaves enough on the bottom to allow for a “foot.”

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She then compresses the piece well so she can avoid having an “s” crack appear during firing, as you see here.

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Next, throwing: Graciela brings the walls up, shapes the bowl, and fills it out. All of this takes about 3 minutes, but it is the part Graciela loves the most and what got her hooked.

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She compresses the rim and then uses a “rib” to push in the walls and refine the design. As she goes along, she rubs a sponge around the pot to soak up excess water and smooth the surface and then squeezes it out into a nearby bucket.

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When this part is done, Graciela takes a wire cutter made from fishing line and beads to slice the bowl from the wheel.

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Stage 2: Drying, Trimming, and Designing

Now the bowl needs to sit and dry, but not completely. She needs it to dry only to the “leather-hard” stage so it will be wet enough to trim. The way to know if the bowl is just right is if it does not distort in handling.

Graciela brought a different piece to the wheel that was adequately dry to show me the next steps. She centered it and then tapped the bottom to seal it to the wheel. She used the pear-shaped trimming tool to do the shaping. It’s this step that determines the final silhouette of the piece; if you want it to have higher feet, for a serving bowl for example, or, for the sake of the yarn bowl, a low, stable foot.

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She wrote her name in cursive in the bottom.

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Next, Graciela often draws and carves designs in the bowl using stencils. She bought scalpels from a medical supply store to cut out the precise designs.

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Stage 3: Bisque and Glaze Firing

The pieces need to be bone dry before they can be fired. Bone dry pots feel cold to the touch. A wet finger or your tongue will stick to it slightly as well. I did not try this.

Pots are fired twice. The first step is the bisque firing. The purpose of this firing is to drive all the water out of the pots. Graciela has an old kiln. The newer kilns are digitized, but for hers, she uses a “kiln sitter” to indicate when the kiln has reached the proper temperature. When a cone bends, the kiln automatically shuts off. The bisque firing heats the kiln to 1800 degrees Fahrenheit.

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Graciela needs to have enough pieces to fill the kiln before firing. Finding space in the kiln is like “working a 3-D crossword puzzle,” she says. She creates shelves at the required heights using kiln posts and then carefully arranges the pieces from bottom to top. For the later glaze firing, this is even more challenging because none of the pieces can touch.

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During the bisque firing, Graciela wants the temperature to increase very slowly or else the pieces may explode. She usually “candles” the kiln for several hours. During this stage she leaves open the kiln and uses the low temperature setting on the bottom ring. She then closes the lid for the next stages in which she does an hour on low, one hour on medium, and one hour on high. She keeps notes on the stages and temperatures in this notebook.

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When the pottery is “bisqued” it is easier to handle but remains porous, like the almost brittle pottery you use at one of the Paint Your Own stores.

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Now for the glazing. After mixing the glaze in the 5-gallon bucket with a hand blender, she uses a set of tongs to submerge the piece, as she’s doing now with a bisqued pitcher.

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The pieces also get wax on the bottom so the glaze doesn’t stick to the foot ring or to the kiln shelves. Graciela mixes her glazes at Manassas Clay’s clay kitchen. Local pottery suppliers purchase bulk chemicals and potters can then mix their own glazes. You pay for the amount you use to make, for example, 5,000 grams of a certain glaze. A 5-gallon bucket may cost around $48.

When the glaze is dry, the piece goes back into the kiln for the glaze firing. This firing is also done in three stages (low, medium, and high), but without the need to candle the kiln. This time the kiln is fired to about 2200 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s when the so-called “kiln gods” intervene and you discover a surprise when you open the kiln. Graciela tells buyers that each piece will be unique. She won’t take orders for a matching set because of the difficulties in achieving identical pieces given the quixotic nature of the clay and glaze and where the pieces sit in the kiln.

Reusing the Clay

Another piece of equipment essential to the studio is the slab roller. Graciela is able to reuse her scraps of clay by rolling them out and then cutting out ornaments with cookie cutters or making boxes. She also collects stamps, and anything that can make a pattern, to use for the sides of boxes. She often paints a design with white glaze, like the lovely artichoke on this brie baker, which I bought that afternoon as an early holiday gift.

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Inventory and Sales

I paid inside Graciela’s house where she keeps her office and the mini photography studio for her product shots. She also stores her inventory here and packing supplies.

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Graciela is in her busiest time of year, making special order advent wreaths (one of which I bought), brie bakers, ornaments, lamps, butter crocks, and mugs. But when January comes, she has a good month or two to play in the studio and come up with new designs. All artists need that time and lucky for her, a room of her own.

Posted by Leslie

A Green Roof Shed Grows in Del Ray

I had admired from afar the green roof shed I saw my neighbors, Melissa and Bruni, building by hand a couple of years ago. When DIY Del Ray came into being, I leapt at the chance to interview them. I met with Melissa and we admired the finished shed and talked about how she and Bruni designed and built it.

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Melissa and Bruni wanted a green roof on their shed because “they’re adorable and effective for retaining stormwater runoff,” says Melissa.

A green roof is also known as a “living roof,” and, in addition to reducing stormwater run-off, the plants can create a habitat for wildlife, lower urban air temperatures, filter pollutants and carbon dioxide from the air, and insulate buildings from sound. The Alexandria Duncan Library is the first green roof in Alexandria, VA. It was sown in 2005 with a variety of sedum, the same landscaping you can see on the grounds.

Melissa and Bruni started by defining the needs for their green roof shed. They wanted a shed large enough for bikes and lumber from their various DIY projects. (They have a workshop in their basement for kitchen, basement, and other past and current home renovation projects – the subject of a future DIY Del Ray post.)

They finalized the shed design using The DIY Guide to Green and Living Roofs by Dusty Gedge and John Little, which Melissa found online from Living Roofs.

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With help from Melissa’s carpenter sister in Texas (over the phone), they built the entire structure by hand. They followed the City of Alexandria code for the total volume and height of the structure. The City did not include the height of the plants in the required height of the shed. Therefore, since Melissa and Bruni planned to use grasses and wildflowers, they didn’t have make the roof any lower than the basic height requirement.

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One of the biggest challenges was converting the metric units in the British DIY manual to American units. Melissa wasn’t overly confident in her math when it came to calculating the load bearing struts, so she added more – one two-by-four every foot. “The shed is probably sturdier than our house,” she says.

She added that the overbuilding begins below ground – with eight 4×4 posts, each sunk in 2 feet of concrete. On one of their frequent phone consultations, Melissa’s sister assured her that “the shed was not going to come down.”

They worked on it during weekends over the course of about nine months. “We had the basic building completed before the blizzards in 2010,” explains Melissa, “but the doors and window, final trim, and paint had to wait until the snow melted.”

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When they were done building the structure, they added dirt from the yard and planted wildflowers.  Now, Melissa says “they get better grass growing on the roof than they manage to grow in their yard.” Plus, they have a lovely view of the colorful shed and wildflower garden from their kitchen window.

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Materials:

  • Roof: Marine plywood; rim made of pressure-treated 4x4s split diagonally from Smoot Lumber Co.
  • Pond liner between layers of special landscaping fabric to protect from punctures and tears, held in place with plastic 1×4 trim.
  • Recycled cedar siding from Rebuild Warehouse.
  • Remaining lumber from Home Depot.

Cost:

Melissa and Bruni estimate that the shed cost about $2,000. They say they probably could have done a shed of the same size for about $1,000, if they had scrapped the roof, the window, and the recycled cedar siding. The marine plywood was more than $100 a sheet, and the pond liner and materials were about $500.

Posted by Leslie