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Showing posts with label Greenhouse & Potting Shed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greenhouse & Potting Shed. Show all posts

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Lawbre Greenhouse Construction Progress

Happy spring everyone! Though you would not notice any difference if you were here in the northwest US with me. It is foggy, gray with low lying clouds, very chilly and drizzling with tiny droplets of rain. Would someone please tell the sun and the flowers that it is time to come out now??? Ah well, at least here in my work room I am doing spring things - building the Lawbre Greenhouse kit!


While I would never want to discourage anyone, I am compelled to say that it is no wonder why you do not see many photos of this completed kit. Nor can any blog posts be found about building one. It is fiddly, complicated, has loads of parts, takes an extra amount of patience and, while it has extensive instructions, some of them are not very clear. It is "vintage", long out of production, and not cheap if you do happen to find one. I purchased both of mine from eBay: this kit with the potting shed/greenhouse and a stand alone greenhouse only kit. But I am a glutton for hard things and can never pass up a kit from times past. Let me expound on the assembly process...

Kit Components

The first thing you need to do is to pull apart the instructions to remove the included building template sheets. With these, you will make a board to pin the parts to for assembly. You'll need large sheets of foam core boards to attach the templates to, then you'll have to cover the templates in waxed paper so you do not ruin them with glue. This is because for the long sides and roof sides, you will need to use the template boards twice. For the Potting Shed and Greenhouse kit, there are four sheets: long wall (x2), roof side (x2), end wall and door. In the freestanding greenhouse only kit there is an additional template for the end wall with no door.


My Foam Core boards were 11" x 14" x 1/8" and were the perfect size. Luckily I already had them in my supplies. I used an Elmer's Glue Stick to adhere the template onto the foam core board, then covered the template with waxed paper using Zots to hold it in place.


I followed the instructions, using "T" pins to hold the parts in place while the glue dried. I used Gorilla Wood Glue for the wood to wood adhesion and Fast Grab Tacky Glue for the "glass" jobs..


At this point everything needed to be painted before inserting the "glass" (which is just some sort of plexi material). The wood is nice but needs a good deal of sanding. I am not super happy with the glossy finish for the black paint: it is Wrought Iron by Patio Paint. It is weather resistant so I should have considered more carefully before settling on it. It isn't terrible in person, but the gloss finish and photos aren't the best of friends.



In between all the gluing and painting I started on the greenhouse floor. I didn't have many of the clay bricks left over from the potting shed but I did have a lot of Magic Brik sticker roll in my stash. I covered the MDF floor in primer, then stuck down the brick sticker in several rows.


I made a mistake when I used a mystery baggie full of powder to make the bricks with. It was not a good mortar. I think I had made the same mistake a while back and didn't like the results. But because it was a while back, I forgot and repeated the same mistake. Can I blame menopause? It was too gritty and too runny and wanted to pull up with the sticker. I should have used joint compound. At any rate, it was not the look I wanted but I decided I could rise to the challenge and make it work. Instead of uniform brick it turned into an ancient and worn out paver look. Whatever.

Mortar spread over the sticker paper

Pulling off the sticker sheet along with some of the "bricks"

Once it dried I sanded and cleaned up the grout lines a bit.

To make the bricks coordinate with the bricks in the potting shed (at least in color tone), I repeated the color palette from my last post. Then I applied whitewash, then sealer, then spackle for the grout. I applied a grayish wash once everything was dry. It still needs more aging, but I'll save that for when I apply the final aging to the entire structure. That way it stays uniform.

Initial coloring

Applying matte sealer

Turned out well enough for a greenhouse floor

Once the floor was ready I began to assemble the walls. I am playing with the idea of leaving one of the walls removable so that it is easier to set up and take photos. Only two of the three walls are glued to the floor now.

A daisy chain of rubber bands held the floor tightly to the walls while the glue dried

I left the door to open in or out for scene flexibility

The third wall is not attached

I made a valiant start on the roof, but that is a whole new level of complicated!!! I had hoped to have it finished for this week's post, but the process is going much slower than the walls had gone. Hopefully, next week, I'll have the roof plus the landscape board to share. And I also hope to share some exciting updates on the real life family room progress!

Until we meet again, I wish you blooms and buds and a bit of sunshine!

xo xo, 

Jodi

Monday, March 9, 2026

Too Many To-Dos!

Hi Guys! Russ and I are just back from a wonderful and heart filling trip to see family, friends and some awe inspiring parts of the American West! So many things ignited my mini passion that I came home filled with inspiration and motivation to tackle everything on my To-Do and Wish lists. The only obstacle has been... knowing where to start! I should probably do the laundry first!

Before we left I had so much excited, nervous energy that I was having trouble sleeping. I took advantage of the extra hours and started on the Lawbre Potting Shed and Greenhouse. The greenhouse structure is built totally from stick lumber and has to be constructed on a foam panel and held in place with "T" pins until the glue is dried.


The potting shed portion is comprised of 3/8" particle board and is easy to assemble, so I begin with that.



Because I have a vested interest in reducing the "stuff" in my work room, I dug around in my wood stash to find something I could use for both the interior and exterior wall cladding. I found a couple different sized bead board sheets and luckily had plenty! I applied it horizontally to look like clapboard.



I also had a couple sheets of vintage white brick to use as flooring. I picked a few colors of acrylic paint and randomly painted, then whitewashed the bricks. I used OneTime spackle for grout and will age everything with washes or chalk dust once the roof is on and the window is in.





I'm hoping to start on the greenhouse walls this week but I can't give the project my full attention for several weeks. You see, we have to turn our attention back to the real life house renos now that Russ' crazy work project is finished. With a bit of smooth progress and renewed motivation we should have the family room wrapped up in a few weeks. Then I have some new tools to set up in my workroom, more mini stuff to list on eBay and a side project for a friend. See? Too many To-Dos!

But one last exciting thing...

Auntie Em's in Glendale Arizona just happens to be right on the way from my parent's house in Lake Havasu to our friends' house in Carefree. If I had the time I could spend days (and soooo many $$$) in there! It is absolutely jam packed with amazing minis! Emily, the vivacious and friendly owner (who is in her 80's) is still there to talk minis! I always seem to find something on my wish list, and this time was no different! 


I know, I know! I need another project like I need a hole in my head but come on! How can I resist a Sid Cooke?????? It'll go on the dream shelf to tempt me with all my other treasures until inspiration wipes out my common sense. 😊

Progress on all my dreams might come slow, but knowing that I am working on something everyday is comforting! I'll be back to share some kind of progress soon!

xo xo,

Jodi

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

A New Spring Project...

Hello Friends! For those of us in the Northern Hemisphere, winter is in full force. In the Northwest corner of the United States, that means dreary, gray, often wet skies. Chilly mornings force extra layers, dark evenings hasten bedtime and yards full of slowly growing twigs await nature's transformation. The air crackles with an electric longing as the huddled masses at bus stops gird their loins until the first signs of spring. I'll know it's here when, upon awakening, I am greeted by a bright morning full of birdsong. That's when my annual store of hope and joy will fully burst open! Until then, I am orchestrating plans in my mini workshop for a new spring project.


More will be announced, right here, soon. But first, I need to make the loop to the Southwestern United States to check on the family elders. They are much wiser and live where the winters aren't so tough to survive. Hopefully, while there, I'll absorb enough sunshine to tide me through the last dreary days of winter back home.

Stay warm! See you soon! 

xo xo,

Jodi