Electric
piano
My daughter
recently bought an electric piano, which means that I had to put it in a
bottle!
I used some walnut
strips that I had left over from previous models.
I bought a 5 litre
wine fermenting bottle on line and made all the parts to fit through its neck.
I used coloured
resin to make a flat base in the bottle on which to fix the wooden floor.
The piano, stool
and base were assembled dry outside the bottle and the locating pegs of the
piano and stool were marked on the wooden floor planks and 1,5mm holes drilled
in the floor planks.
I was fortunate to
find a female figure the correct scale of the piano and of dimensions that
would fit through the bottle neck. The piano and stool were dry fitted to the
wooden floor and the figures’ legs were cut at the knees and shaped and
re-glued to the body in the bent position, checking that they would still fit
through the neck of the bottle. The arms were perfect as is. The head just
pulled off a spigot on the body.
Construction.
Three tongue depressors were glued onto the resin base in the bottle and then the wooden strips were glued in place.
Some more resin was
poured in around the edges of the floor to seal the side gaps.
A piece of paper
was laid over the floor to protect it and the pedal unit base with attached
power connection panel was inserted.
The sections of the
lower back panel were then inserted and glued together onto the pedal base.
The pieces of the
right hand side panel were inserted and assembled.
When dry, the left
hand side panel was similarly assembled.
The assembled lower
back panel was glued to the side panels using 24hr thixotropic epoxy and the
assembly was temporarily positioned in its locating holes in the floor. The
keyboard was dry fitted onto the side panels to ensure the alignment of the
whole unit whilst the glue dried.
When dry, the piano
was now glued to its locating holes in the floor.
When set, the
keyboard was removed and then glued back in place and the front control panel
also fitted behind the keyboard keys.
The rear power
socket panel was now glued in place and the top was then glued on. The stool
was now assembled and glued to the floor.
Finally, the body
of the figure except the head was inserted and dry fitted to the stool. The
left arm was then fitted in place resting on the keyboard and glued to its arm
socket. When set, the figure was removed from the stool and the right arm glued
to its socket at the same angle as the left arm. When dry, the body was glued
to the stool.
When set, the head
was inserted and slotted onto the body.
The music stand was
now glued to the top panel.
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