Wonderful informative video. You can also dye the concrete different shades of colors by mixing in concrete pigment powder. Just wanted to point out to readers how important "curing" concrete is. To do it correctly concrete needs to stay evenly moist for several weeks. { where Irene wrapped her containers in plastic and placed in the shade.} Why this is crucial is the fact that during this time period crystals are formed within the matrix of the medium. It is these crystals that gives concrete its true strength and ability to age well. If this step is not given the proper attention, the structure will crumble in a couple months to a year. {Fun fact...One can actually feel the sculpture heat up during this process.}
The recipe I use is a 1 part white Portland cement, 1 part peat moss, and 1 part perlite. The perlite helps keep the finished pieces lighter and easier to move around. Mine have lasted for years and I have found that plants love, love, love being planted in hypertufa pots. I used a 5 gallon bucket of each ingredient and poured them into a wheelbarrow which my husband turned with a shovel while I wet it down with a hose. You can make several large pieces with this amount, but it takes a strong person to keep turning the mixture. I like the idea of making smaller batches like you did which would be something I could do on my own. Also, I used cooking spray as release.
Great information Thank you. A safety suggestion would be to wear a mask when pouring the dry concrete into the tub because concrete dust is toxic to breathe.
I thought of this too, the concrete can harden inside of the lungs and cause health problems, very bad to breath it. Even peat moss isn't good to breath either. I wear a mask when using peat moss in the garden. If I don't I cough all night & the next day.
My mom made something like the boxed one but a solid block and carved several of them into various animal statues for her garden. They were beautiful and whimsical ❤
That is a wonderful idea. I wish I had my daughter here. Her major in art school was sculpture! Thanks for posting that. Now, I will have to give it a go. Do you know how long she let it harden before she started sculpting it?
@@loujones5388 all I remember is that she would check how firm it had set up several times until she felt she could carve a shape without compromising the rest of the “cube” of concrete mix. She used an old paring knife I think! 😊
PLEASE wear a face mask...the concrete 'powder' will go into your lungs as you are pouring and mixing it and it gets solid in your lungs and cannot be removed. an N95, mask is cheap at the hardware store where you buy the hardware cloth [the squares 'chickenwire' ]. Thank you
I’ve been researching how to do hypertufa and this is my favorite tutorial. Your pots are exactly what I hope mine will look like. Thank you for the excellent information, professional footage and all around fantastic lesson!
Nice video! Be sure to wear a face mask / breathing mask next time though! The dust from cement and concrete is very bad for the lungs; like you know how it’s very bad for the skin, it’s even worse for the lungs. Good luck with your future projects, and please be safe ❤️
For the pot that looked like a pumpkin, instead of the bucket, use another bag filled with sand, more pliable and easier to remove. Great video, thanks for sharing.
Another finish: put live moss, buttermilk, & water in a blender and pulverize. Put liquid in a spray bottle and spraycoat the vessels outer side. The buttermilk feeds the moss roots that dig into the little pockets/cracks of moss/vermiculite. Small fern spores do well, too.
To accelerate the moss growth .... find a handful of "Pretty Moss I Found In My Garden" and tear it up into small bits. Mix it thoroughly with a handful of garden dirt. Mix that with buttermilk, enough to make it sorta soupy and gooey...like pancake batter. Now paint it onto the outside of the planters, and let Nature do her worst!
Where do you get your ideas from. These planters are cool. And thank you for the mistake video too. It’s nice to see that everyone makes mistakes and fixes them.
thank you for the step-by-step and thank you for showing us your oopsie so we don't try the same. I like your planters. I'm looking forward to warm weather so I can get back to my hypertufa.
Thank you for sharing this fantastic "how to" instruction video. I am going to try making some for my water feature I am building. Regards from South Africa
I made many of very similar prox 7-8 years ago. I found a power washer made the perfect rustic surface in 1-2 minutes. Most of them are still going strong to this day. White cement give a more light sandstone look if you are into experimenting. Yours came out great ! Just keep in mind the power washer if you want to make many in no time.
❤ Years ago, I read several articles on hypertuffa pots. One of the most interesting articles was about covering polystyrene (styrofoam) packing containers with a hyperfuffa mix. This was to create a more protected area for the root zone. Have you seen or heard of this procedure? In my area, it can get to be -40 in the winter, so cold hardiness is important.
Thank you for mentioning this. I have some big styrofoam packing containers and was just wondering about using them. Currently I have my grow bags in them, to help with water retention in my hot SW high mountain desert climate. I'm going to try it!
I've watched a couple of your videos and I'm very impressed with your creativity and attention to detail! You gave me some great inspiration for my garden planters. Thank you!
If you don’t want to wait for moss, go out and find some native moss to collect. Put it in a blender with some some yogurt, then paint the mixture where you want the moss to grow.
Use a compressor with an air hose and an attachment called a blow gun by putting the small nozzle into the edge of the mold the forced air will push the mold right out. Water works just as well. Nice job on your tufa pots.
I'd love to have the space to do this. Since I don't have the room for it to cure, and it would be physically hard for me, I make planter troughs out of styrofoam. Not porous, but it insulates.
I was looking for garden decorations and I came across your channel. 😊I loved these planters. You made the process seem so easy and doable. I'm going to try doing some planters.
Anyone know if these can be as a fountain/bubbler for bird baths? Love the details of the video and the fact you included ’goofs’ and didn’t let them bother you a bit! 👏
Hi, in fact I'm using one of the bowls as a little water feature, so it could work, but you'll have to change water in it very often as it will get green. I'm using pool solution to keep water clean, but it will not work for a bird bath
New subscriber:We've made many of these hypertufa pieces in the past, but you've re-energized me to make more! Today, it was 40.56 Celsius....I'll wait till it cools off! (105° fahrenheit). -Eva, from sunny Texas
Do you think this recipe she used for cold weather would be good for hot weather? I live in the keys and it’s warm but also humid so that may be a concern as well
the peat I buy seems to come out very clumpy. Do you run yours through a sieve, or do you just break the chunks (very slow and tedious.) THIS IS A VERY NICE VIDEO I especially love your square trough, it looks absolutely ancient.
If u are making a large amount (or ur older an a little help goes along way) …. Put ur dry mixture in a 5 gal plastic bucket with a threaded lid an just roll around to mix the dry ingredients. Then pour ur water in.
Another fantastic video and I am in love with the square planter!! No doubt I will be making one of these. Question… if you don’t put a hole in the bottom will it hold water? I would like to make it into a miniature water garden. Thanks again!
Even if the planter didn't actually leak, the concrete absorbs water & it evaporates from the surface rapidly, so you'd have to frequently refill it. But it works well as a reservoir in a recirculating water feature where it sits in a small pool with a pump that pushes water up into the planter through a hose in the bottom & then flows over the sides back into the pool. If you make it shallow or place rocks in it, it makes a great birdbath. And the sound is delightful!
Excellent video! Thank you for the information about curing, I just purchased a few bags of concrete to learn how to create planters and lawn ornaments and now you have expanded my ideas further...again, thank you!
Very beautiful. I used perlite in my project, it actually looks very nice, because is in the garden, the white specs will blend with the surroundings, don’t look bad at all. Subscribed! 👍🏼🌸
Hi Irene, these planters are stunning. I can't believe they were so simple to make! I thought they might make a beautiful water feature in the garden too. Did you find they held water well with no leaking when you were soaking them?
Thanks! And yes, you can absolutely use them for water features, they hold water fine, I have two water features made of hypertufa in my garden (there are videos about them too!)
Can't wait to try this! I wanted to share that perlite is volcanic glass. I've used it for years in the garden but one day it blew back into my eyes and I wasn't wearing my glasses. I would recommend protective eyewear when using it, especially if pouring it straight from the bag. Happy Planting! 🪨🪴🥽
I have also used a styrofoam box on a piece of cardboard upside down and put the hyper tufa mix on the outside. I did everything on top of a picnic table under 2 shade trees.
Thank you for this! I'm very glad to see that you use gloves (so many RUclips videos show people mixing cement without protection on hands, feet, etc). I would suggest a mask, too, especially when mixing fiberglass fiber. In fact, I looked at my local big box construction store (Home Depot for me), and there is what seems to be a safer alternative: Cellulose Blown-In Insulation (but in retrospect, I'm thinking they won't add strength). I don't know how this would hold up in these planters, but since Japanese studies showed that breathing fiberglass had the same effect on the lungs as asbestos 😳 I would rather take a chance with my pots, rather than my health. Please be cautious and stay safe.
Thank you for your attention! The fibers I use is not fiberglass actually, this is synthetic fibers (like polyethylene or something) so they are not harmful for lungs! I wouldn't use fiberglass as well!
Thank you for the video. I’ve been looking for a material I can use to create a vertical garden. I’m thinking about making several layers that stack up held in place with rebar through the drainage hole. May add additional drainage holes trickle down to the bottom layers. Do you think this would work?
This is a great project idea. Im thinking this would be neat for decorative stepping stones and other potential decorations for outdoors or even custum garden bed borders. I'm going to have to give this a try.
Irina por fin te leo en español !!!!!!!! Estoy muy muy emocionada poder entender mejor tus excelentes videos me encanta, todo tu trabajo que haces todos los tutoriales son excelentes eres una manualista espectacular, te admiro desde la primera vez que vi. Dios te bendiga hermosa, bendiciones y un abrazo muy fuerte desde Chiapas, México.
Use a broken piece of brick to help with smoothing edges and bringing out areas that u like it will help like the wire brush, but can be more economical affordable..if you move the inside bucket within a hour it might've helped a bit better in removing it later.. they turned out very very pretty well done...
Well, they are defintely heavy, but much lighter than the concrete planters that size would be. I can move them around myself except for the square one
Yeah they'll break down after a number of years I suppose. They are just beautiful though! You could probably substitute some other materials for the moss and vermiculite but if you want them to stay moist for moss growth on the outside I see why you would use those two ingredients. They turned out just great, nice job🌿!
Wonderful informative video. You can also dye the concrete different shades of colors by mixing in concrete pigment powder. Just wanted to point out to readers how important "curing" concrete is. To do it correctly concrete needs to stay evenly moist for several weeks. { where Irene wrapped her containers in plastic and placed in the shade.} Why this is crucial is the fact that during this time period crystals are formed within the matrix of the medium. It is these crystals that gives concrete its true strength and ability to age well. If this step is not given the proper attention, the structure will crumble in a couple months to a year. {Fun fact...One can actually feel the sculpture heat up during this process.}
Can you put up the names of the material to use I can’t figure it out .
Thank you
Grate video !
🤝
@@gudesanchez2008 Portland cement, peat & vermiculite. She also added concrete reinforcing fibers.
The recipe I use is a 1 part white Portland cement, 1 part peat moss, and 1 part perlite. The perlite helps keep the finished pieces lighter and easier to move around. Mine have lasted for years and I have found that plants love, love, love being planted in hypertufa pots. I used a 5 gallon bucket of each ingredient and poured them into a wheelbarrow which my husband turned with a shovel while I wet it down with a hose. You can make several large pieces with this amount, but it takes a strong person to keep turning the mixture. I like the idea of making smaller batches like you did which would be something I could do on my own. Also, I used cooking spray as release.
Thank you!
I think I will try your portions since I like the idea of as little cement as necessary. Thank you.
Great information Thank you. A safety suggestion would be to wear a mask when pouring the dry concrete into the tub because concrete dust is toxic to breathe.
I thought of this too, the concrete can harden inside of the lungs and cause health problems, very bad to breath it. Even peat moss isn't good to breath either. I wear a mask when using peat moss in the garden. If I don't I cough all night & the next day.
And safety glasses. Lungs and eyes are in the same range as your heart: very precious.
I came here to say that :)
That’s the first thing I said when I saw this!
Wear a mask, please!!!!
My mom made something like the boxed one but a solid block and carved several of them into various animal statues for her garden. They were beautiful and whimsical ❤
That is a wonderful idea. I wish I had my daughter here. Her major in art school was sculpture! Thanks for posting that. Now, I will have to give it a go. Do you know how long she let it harden before she started sculpting it?
@@loujones5388 all I remember is that she would check how firm it had set up several times until she felt she could carve a shape without compromising the rest of the “cube” of concrete mix. She used an old paring knife I think! 😊
that is fantastic!!!
PLEASE wear a face mask...the concrete 'powder' will go into your lungs as you are pouring and mixing it and it gets solid in your lungs and cannot be removed. an N95, mask is cheap at the hardware store where you buy the hardware cloth [the squares 'chickenwire' ]. Thank you
I’ve been researching how to do hypertufa and this is my favorite tutorial. Your pots are exactly what I hope mine will look like. Thank you for the excellent information, professional footage and all around fantastic lesson!
Thanks a lot!!
Nice video! Be sure to wear a face mask / breathing mask next time though! The dust from cement and concrete is very bad for the lungs; like you know how it’s very bad for the skin, it’s even worse for the lungs. Good luck with your future projects, and please be safe ❤️
Exactly! When that dust gets into moist lungs... concrete. Seriously, wear a mask.
For the pot that looked like a pumpkin, instead of the bucket, use another bag filled with sand, more pliable and easier to remove. Great video, thanks for sharing.
Great idea!
Another finish: put live moss, buttermilk, & water in a blender and pulverize. Put liquid in a spray bottle and spraycoat the vessels outer side. The buttermilk feeds the moss roots that dig into the little pockets/cracks of moss/vermiculite. Small fern spores do well, too.
I should have scrolled down before making my own comment! I love the fern idea.
To accelerate the moss growth .... find a handful of "Pretty Moss I Found In My Garden" and tear it up into small bits.
Mix it thoroughly with a handful of garden dirt.
Mix that with buttermilk, enough to make it sorta soupy and gooey...like pancake batter.
Now paint it onto the outside of the planters, and let Nature do her worst!
Really, this is intriguing! But why buttermilk?
My teacher told us that buttermilk provides protein (protein = nitrogen?) for the early growth of the moss
Where do you get your ideas from. These planters are cool. And thank you for the mistake video too. It’s nice to see that everyone makes mistakes and fixes them.
thank you for the step-by-step and thank you for showing us your oopsie so we don't try the same. I like your planters. I'm looking forward to warm weather so I can get back to my hypertufa.
Thank you for sharing this fantastic "how to" instruction video. I am going to try making some for my water feature I am building.
Regards from South Africa
Irina you are so talented they turn beautiful !
Thanks!!
I tried forever to figure out what the brown mixture was. They look amazing. Thanks for the English version
Peat i think
Dry peat that comes in a bale works much better
The best fake rock tutorial I found on RUclips! It looks awesome.
Thanks a lot for sharing this with us.
I made many of very similar prox 7-8 years ago. I found a power washer made the perfect rustic surface in 1-2 minutes. Most of them are still going strong to this day. White cement give a more light sandstone look if you are into experimenting.
Yours came out great !
Just keep in mind the power washer if you want to make many in no time.
Thank you for the advice, will try using power washer for this!!
Que materiales se usan en español por favor
When do you use the power washer?? When she rinsed then off and filled with water?? Please
@@sharonmccollister4204 Instead of brush, it does the same as the brush, just much faster.
Awesome video. The instructions are well thought out and all the time you put into it was greatly appreciated.
Great video! You've worked many hours to make this video and it shows! Clear instructions and nice camera work. Well done!!
Thanks a lot!!
These turned out fantastic. This is a great video.
Very nice work on this project ❤
Made these years ago and had forgotten the mixture ratios... Great video... Live the natural look
A-ma-zing! Your skills and creativity have no comparison to anyone l've seen on RUclips.
Congratulations!
This was an awesome project I am going to make these thank you
Thanks for sharing this. Your information was clear and very understandable. I've been thinking about doing a project like this and now I can!
❤ Years ago, I read several articles on hypertuffa pots. One of the most interesting articles was about covering polystyrene (styrofoam) packing containers with a hyperfuffa mix. This was to create a more protected area for the root zone. Have you seen or heard of this procedure? In my area, it can get to be -40 in the winter, so cold hardiness is important.
Thank you for mentioning this. I have some big styrofoam packing containers and was just wondering about using them. Currently I have my grow bags in them, to help with water retention in my hot SW high mountain desert climate. I'm going to try it!
N
I love hypertufa. Yes the fibers cut down on cracking. They look amazing
Beautiful lady,lovely accent,Gorgeous hairstyle,with awesome ideas! ❤
LOVE LOVE LOVE YOUR TALENT LOTS OF WORK but so beautiful outcome
I've watched a couple of your videos and I'm very impressed with your creativity and attention to detail! You gave me some great inspiration for my garden planters. Thank you!
Thanks!!
I am so glad Irene learned English, that she could share all these great vids with us :-)
If you don’t want to wait for moss, go out and find some native moss to collect. Put it in a blender with some some yogurt, then paint the mixture where you want the moss to grow.
Use a compressor with an air hose and an attachment called a blow gun by putting the small nozzle into the edge of the mold the forced air will push the mold right out. Water works just as well. Nice job on your tufa pots.
I'd love to have the space to do this. Since I don't have the room for it to cure, and it would be physically hard for me, I make planter troughs out of styrofoam. Not porous, but it insulates.
I was looking for garden decorations and I came across your channel. 😊I loved these planters. You made the process seem so easy and doable. I'm going to try doing some planters.
They look great to me, especially that im an artist and make many lovely things. The square one reminded me of a zen pool for water in a zen garden.
those are beautiful
Anyone know if these can be as a fountain/bubbler for bird baths?
Love the details of the video and the fact you included ’goofs’ and didn’t let them bother you a bit! 👏
Hi, in fact I'm using one of the bowls as a little water feature, so it could work, but you'll have to change water in it very often as it will get green. I'm using pool solution to keep water clean, but it will not work for a bird bath
@@IrenesDIY Thanks so much!
New subscriber:We've made many of these hypertufa pieces in the past, but you've re-energized me to make more!
Today, it was 40.56 Celsius....I'll wait till it cools off!
(105° fahrenheit).
-Eva, from sunny Texas
Hi, Eva, sounds pretty hot! We have 36C today and it's really exhausting too🙈😁
Do you think this recipe she used for cold weather would be good for hot weather? I live in the keys and it’s warm but also humid so that may be a concern as well
the peat I buy seems to come out very clumpy. Do you run yours through a sieve, or do you just break the chunks (very slow and tedious.) THIS IS A VERY NICE VIDEO I especially love your square trough, it looks absolutely ancient.
Looked great! Really love the square planter and will definitely make one (or more)!
It’s much easier if you put the vermiculite in the bottom before mixing because it’s not easy to dig down through cement
If u are making a large amount (or ur older an a little help goes along way) …. Put ur dry mixture in a 5 gal plastic bucket with a threaded lid an just roll around to mix the dry ingredients. Then pour ur water in.
This is The best video on the subject on RUclips
Another fantastic video and I am in love with the square planter!! No doubt I will be making one of these. Question… if you don’t put a hole in the bottom will it hold water? I would like to make it into a miniature water garden. Thanks again!
Even if the planter didn't actually leak, the concrete absorbs water & it evaporates from the surface rapidly, so you'd have to frequently refill it. But it works well as a reservoir in a recirculating water feature where it sits in a small pool with a pump that pushes water up into the planter through a hose in the bottom & then flows over the sides back into the pool. If you make it shallow or place rocks in it, it makes a great birdbath. And the sound is delightful!
@@canoetripper4651 All good suggestions! Thanks for the response!!
Excellent video! Thank you for the information about curing, I just purchased a few bags of concrete to learn how to create planters and lawn ornaments and now you have expanded my ideas further...again, thank you!
Please wear a mask when working with cement
Wow, beautiful!
Crude, basic, rough... and beautiful. Try blending some moss with buttermilk and spraying one that sits in the shade. Nice job.
Beautiful work thank you so much❤
our awesome men to the rescue! ❤❤
Beautiful!
Very beautiful. I used perlite in my project, it actually looks very nice, because is in the garden, the white specs will blend with the surroundings, don’t look bad at all. Subscribed! 👍🏼🌸
Hi Irene, these planters are stunning. I can't believe they were so simple to make! I thought they might make a beautiful water feature in the garden too. Did you find they held water well with no leaking when you were soaking them?
Thanks! And yes, you can absolutely use them for water features, they hold water fine, I have two water features made of hypertufa in my garden (there are videos about them too!)
Gorgeous!!!
Can't wait to try this! I wanted to share that perlite is volcanic glass. I've used it for years in the garden but one day it blew back into my eyes and I wasn't wearing my glasses. I would recommend protective eyewear when using it, especially if pouring it straight from the bag. Happy Planting! 🪨🪴🥽
Painting to tufa with yogurt. They will quickly start growing a patina of lichens etc.
They look amazing. They really do look like stone. Thanks for showing the process.
I love the idea they are so natural looking as if they were created by nature. I'm definitely going to try this. Thanks.
The planter look great, I hadn’t heard of that peat trick. If you add yoghurt to the outside of the pots it will encourage moss growth❤️✨
I've heard buttermilk works too. You can make a slurry of moss and buttermilk and smear it on the surface, or so I've read. Always wanted to try it.
Love love these!
I have also used a styrofoam box on a piece of cardboard upside down and put the hyper tufa mix on the outside. I did everything on top of a picnic table under 2 shade trees.
Excellent video!
Love them! I'm in a place that just had snow last week and is still below freezing at night. But I have to try this.
Thank you for this! I'm very glad to see that you use gloves (so many RUclips videos show people mixing cement without protection on hands, feet, etc). I would suggest a mask, too, especially when mixing fiberglass fiber. In fact, I looked at my local big box construction store (Home Depot for me), and there is what seems to be a safer alternative: Cellulose Blown-In Insulation (but in retrospect, I'm thinking they won't add strength). I don't know how this would hold up in these planters, but since Japanese studies showed that breathing fiberglass had the same effect on the lungs as asbestos 😳 I would rather take a chance with my pots, rather than my health. Please be cautious and stay safe.
Thank you for your attention! The fibers I use is not fiberglass actually, this is synthetic fibers (like polyethylene or something) so they are not harmful for lungs! I wouldn't use fiberglass as well!
@@IrenesDIY The links you posted are for fiberglass. 🤷♀
I like your outside ideas.
Basic and simple. Thank you.
I love them they came out so good ,especially the one you made with the boxes ! Can’t wait to make them
Thank you for the video. I’ve been looking for a material I can use to create a vertical garden. I’m thinking about making several layers that stack up held in place with rebar through the drainage hole. May add additional drainage holes trickle down to the bottom layers. Do you think this would work?
I think so!
Your husband’s name is Gary? Hey, mine is, too! I’m from Texas, USA.
They look awesome. I am trying this this year. Well done.
They look amazing!! Great job and glad to know they did good through the winter months ! Thanks for sharing ❤ from Canada 🇨🇦
I love how you are using whatever is around. So smart and ingenius! These planters look really great.
This is a great project idea. Im thinking this would be neat for decorative stepping stones and other potential decorations for outdoors or even custum garden bed borders. I'm going to have to give this a try.
Wow , beautiful project , keep up the. Good work thanks for the teaching
cool
Wipe down with some buttermilk, the moss will grow on them in the shade.
I feel so unaccomplished, 😂❤
Well done! Love your pieces of artwork.
Irina por fin te leo en español !!!!!!!! Estoy muy muy emocionada poder entender mejor tus excelentes videos me encanta, todo tu trabajo que haces todos los tutoriales son excelentes eres una manualista espectacular, te admiro desde la primera vez que vi. Dios te bendiga hermosa, bendiciones y un abrazo muy fuerte desde Chiapas, México.
Gracias, Ana🥰
Use a broken piece of brick to help with smoothing edges and bringing out areas that u like it will help like the wire brush, but can be more economical affordable..if you move the inside bucket within a hour it might've helped a bit better in removing it later.. they turned out very very pretty well done...
Excellent tutorial, thank you for sharing.
Love it! They look so good!
That was very nice! Im doing it. Greetings from Costa Rica/U.S.A./Canada
You (& your assistant ) did a great job, they look fab.
Would love to give something like this a go... Tyvm 😊
Are these planters very heavy to move?
Well, they are defintely heavy, but much lighter than the concrete planters that size would be. I can move them around myself except for the square one
Con el agua caliente se afloja!
Russian accent is so bright...
Can you tell me where you buy the plastic containers for use as molding
There is an Amazon link in the description.
Great job!!! They are beautiful!!!
These are fabulous! Thank you for showing us how you made them and the recipe ❤️
Yeah they'll break down after a number of years I suppose. They are just beautiful though! You could probably substitute some other materials for the moss and vermiculite but if you want them to stay moist for moss growth on the outside I see why you would use those two ingredients. They turned out just great, nice job🌿!
These remind me of trough gardens. They turned out very well.
Beautiful!!! It was a lot of work....🤔 Your love for gardening is evident and is enjoyable to watch. Thank you!😊
Great inspiration for a diy fountain. It's great for plants too, I'm sure, but it's perfect for a fountain basin.
VERY, very good. Liked and Subbed. Thank you!
Great videos. You are a great inspirations.
Greetings from Norway.
Love your DIY project! And love the way you think ❣️❣️🫶
Where did you get the large bowls and what are the dimensions and volumes of them?
Great video, thanks for sharing🎉
Great video. You explained everything really well. I may attempt this summer.