Richard_C
Established Member
It seems to be accepted that no finish/sealant or similar will survive lengthy water immersion inside a vase - but if anyone knows of something that does that would be great.
I have lined vases with various things, 22mm copper pipe with an end cap, old plastic bottles and so on but they always constrain the design, in particular flared rim/narrow neck attempts. Recently I played about with using a balloon - coat inside walls with latex glue (copydex), inflate a balloon through the vase neck, later cut balloon at neck level. Seemed OK but after not very long it shrunk back from the walls. I will try again with a non stretchy sandwich bag and see if thats OK despite the inevitable internal creases.
One successful method I have used for a conical vase is to hollow from the base, insert a cut down coke can (63mm) so it meets the narrowing neck then glue a disc into the bottom much like you might do a lidded box if you never wanted to take the lid off. That's OK, but again is a design constraint. I'm also thinking of making in 2 halves vertically, fitting a jar in the hollowed bottom half before gluing and clamping then turning to shape. The neck dosen't need to hold water, it gets wet while you are filling but water only needs to sit in the 'well'.
So the question is - what do others do? Any good ideas for sealing the inside of a vase so it can be used as a flower vase rather than a dry bud vase? I don't use 'exotics', preferring British or European hardwoods like Beech, Ash, sometimes Oak.
I have lined vases with various things, 22mm copper pipe with an end cap, old plastic bottles and so on but they always constrain the design, in particular flared rim/narrow neck attempts. Recently I played about with using a balloon - coat inside walls with latex glue (copydex), inflate a balloon through the vase neck, later cut balloon at neck level. Seemed OK but after not very long it shrunk back from the walls. I will try again with a non stretchy sandwich bag and see if thats OK despite the inevitable internal creases.
One successful method I have used for a conical vase is to hollow from the base, insert a cut down coke can (63mm) so it meets the narrowing neck then glue a disc into the bottom much like you might do a lidded box if you never wanted to take the lid off. That's OK, but again is a design constraint. I'm also thinking of making in 2 halves vertically, fitting a jar in the hollowed bottom half before gluing and clamping then turning to shape. The neck dosen't need to hold water, it gets wet while you are filling but water only needs to sit in the 'well'.
So the question is - what do others do? Any good ideas for sealing the inside of a vase so it can be used as a flower vase rather than a dry bud vase? I don't use 'exotics', preferring British or European hardwoods like Beech, Ash, sometimes Oak.