Idea #48: News2Go Espresso

Crafty Time art tutorial by Dave Pierik, Shelton-Mason County Journal

News 2 Go Espresso

Happy Tree Village’s (Hot Wheels) drivers swing by for coffee and a paper.

You will need:

Tools: ruler and markers, scissors, paintbrushes

Materials: cardboard (not too thin), a plastic cottage cheese container lid, masking tape, school glue, acrylic paints, a thin coffee straw, a milk pull lid, clear plastic, Hot Wheels cars. Craft letters and figures are optional.

Cost: about 75 cents worth of glue and paint. The craft letters were another $2 at a thrift store and would have been a lot more new, so maybe $3 total depending on how you count it.

Time: about 6 hours.

1. Plan

You can start before you think, or you can think before you start. In art, both are good and there’s nothing wrong with improvising. That said, when you’re inspired with an idea, write it down. Make sketches. You can create them later or change them however you like. The weakest pencil is stronger than the strongest memory. I made several sketches several weeks before picking this one to work up for you to try.

2. Measure and mark

Use a ruler and marker. The square corner of a ruler gives you helpful right angles. A Hummer Hot Wheels Car measures 3” long x 1.5” wide, so we need 2” wide lanes. Espresso kiosks are about a lane wide also, so make a 6” square base divided into 3 lanes 2” wide.  Mark 2 sides 3” x 4”, 2 sides 2” x 3” and a roof 3” x 5”.

3. Cut cardboard

Be safe and don’t rush with your sharp tools. Use scissors to cut right on top of the lines you marked. Cardboard is everywhere, so if you make a mistake don’t hesitate to start over. Thin cardboard from a cracker box is much easier to cut than thick corrugated box cardboard. If you want to cut door and window openings (optional) be careful and go slow with a craft knife, being careful to protect the surface underneath it.

4. Assemble and glue

Glue all the edges and line the walls up right on top of the lines you made in Sharpie. Be patient and pay close attention to what you’re doing.

Stack, test fit and adjust parts. Line the walls up to the marks in the middle of your base. Glue along edges and add masking tape as you go, starting from the sides and then the sides to the base to hold everything in place. Set aside to dry.

5. Remove tape

 Well, remove most of it. Carefully peel off the tape where you’ve glued edges. If you used thick corrugated cardboard for the base like I did, put masking tape around the outside edge to tidy that up. You can paint right over it later.

6. Barrier curbs

A sour cream lid ridge has just the right curve, color and shape for a barrier curb. It will be painted red much more easily since it’s already read.

Mark and cut a wide plastic lid (such as from a cottage cheese container) until it looks and fits the way you want it too. You’ll be painting it later. That said, if you have a choice of different colored lids, pick one that is close to the color you want to make it easier for yourself.

7. Base coats

Asphalt and commercial roofs can usually be black. Start with one coat, you can always touch up later. One coat will also work, right on the cardboard, for most building colors. For brighter buildings, basecoat the entire model in white, wait for it to dry completely and then add your base colors over that.

Paint the asphalt and roof black, the building any color you like (I chose light blue this time) and the barrier curbs red or orange. Because it covers everything, I usually save the black for last but looking at the photo I see I didn’t do that this time.

8. Sign letters

You can paint detailed parts of models either on, or off the model. This time, I painted the detailed sign letters first, and then glued them in place after they were dry. Rubber gloves are optional but they do keep your hands a lot cleaner.

If you have craft letters, they pretty work well for signs. If they only come with one each of number and letter of the alphabet, you might have to rethink the kiosk name. News 2 Go was the 4th or 5th name, after Joe & News, Citizen Coffee, Java News and Hot News were considered and dismissed. Test fit for space on top of the building. Base coat letters in white.

9. Dry brush

Painting is messy work. Put newspaper down. Protect surfaces. That said, acrylic paints are water soluble. If you get paint on your cloths, spot clean with soap and water right away.
Coffee kiosks are not big. Be sure to test fit height for the pass-through window and have it be a bit longer than your longest model car. Note the coffee stirrer pass through window shelf. These letters looked better to me on a curve than in a straight line.

So the red will pop against the white behind it, dab your paintbrush on newspaper before painting the top of each letter so that the paint is not too wet. You only want to cover the top, flat surface. A flat brush works best for this. Paint lightly here, just a thin coat or two.

10. Glue & place

Before you glue, test fit the letters on the roof again. Pick letters up one at a time, use an old brush to apply glue onto the bottom of each one, and put it back exactly where it was as you go. Once they’re all in place, take a look and adjust placement before the glue dries – you have just a few minutes. School glue is water soluble, but it destroys brushes once it dries, so I use dollar store brushes for glue.

11. Paint details

Using a medium round pointed brush, not too full of paint, start with the white. Direction arrows, menu boards and “TIP” on a jar on the drive through shelf (which is a cut down coffee stirrer, glued on). Paint even, straight lines and move the model with your other hand for better control.

12. Final touches

Paint a milk pull lid black and glue it to the roof for a roof vent. Use black and red markers to finish the menu boards, ORDER HERE over the window, and dots for doorknobs. Glue the edges of clear plastic (from a Hot Wheels package) and carefully push it into the back for the windows. Dry brush the roof vent gray.  Touch up paint everywhere. Find a place for it and make vroom-vroom sounds with your cars and figures.

13. News 2 Go Espresso

Happy Tree Village has a new spot to grab coffee and a paper. In case you were wondering, the back is nearly the same as the front. Come take a look in the window in downtown Shelton at 3rd & Cota Streets.

14. Crafty Time

What would you like to see next in Crafty Time? Visit www.craftytimewithdave.com for more photos and project ideas.  Please email your feedback to dave@masoncounty.com or call 360-426-4412. Visit our office to see the display!

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