The Grandeur of the Forest Floor: Making a tree stump

     Early in the design process for "Search For The Sugar Puff Hollow" I came across an inspiring image from an old set of science booklets.  The picture (below) was so dreamy and mysterious I wanted to capture elements of it for my book.  It portrayed a grandeur of the forest floor that I hadn't seen before.

I went about figuring out how to make an almost life-sized tree stump.  I didn't want it to be heavy so I needed a structure that was extremely light weight.  This was before I had a soda stream and I was going through a lot of Perrier bottles (and feeling guilty about it).  I love finding ways to recycle plastic bottles and I had begun to save the bottles just in case I could use them for the book.  SO I hot-glued all my perrier bottles together and and made them into the tree stump structure.



After that I covered it with tinfoil and papier mache to create the exposed roots and the top of the stump.  But what to cover it with?
     I had been using yarn to cover some of my trees and really wanted a special yarn to cover the stump since it was a close-up of a tree.  I had found a few sources on Etsy.com for coiled yarn.  My favorite was a shop called faroeviking in Ottawa.  I contacted Heidi who spun and died all of her yarns and she made me 2 skeins of custom dyed and coiled yarn.  You can read more about Heidi here.  It really turned out beautifully.