
a true trash to treasure love Story.
Have you ever had a project that turned out even better than you envisioned?
A project that was years in the making?
A project that truly leaves you just a little bit smug with yourself?

A true love story.
But… like every good love story, there’s always a plot twist.
Because love doesn’t always turn out the way you plan.
(Make sure to read to the very end.)

This story begins several years ago…
when my sweet daughter found an old set of red toile dishes in a Thrift Store in Wisconsin.
Knowing my Love Affair with Red Toile dishes she couldn’t resist the $25 price tag.
While packing their car for their visit home, my son in law picked up the box to rearrange the
car and the bottom fell out. Most of the dishes survived. Several of the large plates did not.
Deciding to turn lemons into Lemonade, I kept the broken plates to make garden stepping
stones with my grandson, Nicholas. (one of my most popular posts.)
Click on picture for project.
Being a “saver”, I saved the remainder of the broken plates for a future project.
(notice I didn’t use the word hoarder?)

Then there’s the base of a broken bird bath.
I’m ashamed to admit how many years that base has been sitting around. (it was a lot!)

I used the rest of the broken dishes along with the base and a 20″ round wood top cut from
cabinet scraps to make the Mosaic table.

To start my project…
I gave the base a simple cleaning and painted it with Decoart Outdoor Living Paint: picket fence*

After the base was fully dried, I dry brushed the base with Color Stain in Ash Grey.


To make the mosaic table top…
- Lightly sand the 20″ wood circle to prime it to accept paint and glue.
- Paint the sides and bottom of the 20″ wood circle with the white paint used on the base.
- Glue the broken pieces of china onto the wood base using a good glue specific for mosaic tiles such as Glass, Metal & More Premium Permanent Glue*
or Weldbond Multi-Purpose Adhesive Glue*
.
- Try to use flat pieces of china whenever possible. You can smooth the sharp edges of the china using a Dremel Tool*
. (read product instructions before using)

- I used unsanded grout because I didn’t want to take the chance of it scratching the china.
- Mix the grout as directed and follow the package instructions when applying the grout onto the top.
- Confession Time…I did not smooth the edges of the China before gluing them onto the top. After the grout had dried, I decided that some of the pieces were too sharp. After it was grouted I went over the sharper pieces with a Dremel tool. The table isn’t completely flat. But that doesn’t matter for how I plan on using the table.
- Seal Grout with Grout Sealer.
Mosaic Table Product Information: (*affiliate link)
Disclaimer: This blog uses ads and affiliate links. If you choose to make a purchase using one of the links, I receive a small commission (at no additional cost to you) that helps offset the costs of maintaining this blog. Thanks for your support!

I really loved that table.
It was just the perfect size to sit by a comfy chair with a good book.
And then there’s the sad part…

The Plot Twist…
To be honest… I made this table on a warm week-end in February.
By the time I was staging the table for pictures, the weather was beginning to really cool down.
Being in a hurry to photograph the project, I didn’t take the time to secure the top
to the base or seal the grout . I stuck it into the garage to do at a later time.
When I finally got around to finishing the project…
I carefully moved the top so I could seal the grout and then glued the top to the base with
a strong adhesive. While the adhesive worked initially, when I went to move it again a few
days later by the top (what was I thinking), the base came crashing down on the garage floor.
To say “I felt defeated” would be a understatement.
That’s one reason…(even though I had a 100 good photo’s)
that I never posted the project until now.
Why? Because, I didn’t want to mislead you.


The Happy Ending…
Always resourceful, I did find that I had a 20″ black metal mesh table that the top fit perfectly on
and I didn’t have to worry about securing it.
The table has sat there beautifully on my back deck all summer.
(who am I kidding…it’s still there.)
So the moral to the story would be to find a super duper industrial adhesive.
Or…what I would do now if I had to do it over again.
I would cut a small wood disc that is slightly smaller than the top of the bird bath base so that it
would fit inside. I would glue the disc (with a really good glue) to the bottom of the wood and
keep it as a removable top. That would help stabilize the top and make for easy storage.
So remember if you decide to try this at home….
Sometimes you have success and sometimes you don’t.
And…sometimes you have a little bit of both.

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