canadapost
Well-Known Member
Hi All!
It’s been a while since I’ve posted anything!
Just wanted to pop on to share an idea I had in case it helps anyone with their own collection.
I’ve owned a bunch of Noble Collection HP wands for a while, but they’ve been sitting in boxes for years because I never found an elegant way (in my opinion) to display them.
I wanted something that could display multiple wands with a somewhat in-world HP theme and not take up too much space. A display you might find at Olivanders.
Most of what I’ve found of online looked like this:
Though, here are a couple photos I drew inspiration from:
To start off with, I only purchased 5 simple things:
What I did:
First off, I dipped the tips of the L hooks in some clear epoxy to give the ends a little bumper - I didn’t want the hooks to scratch the wands.
Then I took apart the shadowbox to remove the front glass - I wanted the wands to be accessible.
I had a cardboard box lying around and used it to test out the wand spacing.
This is what I ended up with for an 18” x 24” canvas:
This masonite panel was glued to the frame back board with wood glue to give the frame more weight and to add thickness for the brass L hooks to screw into.
After the glue cured, I transposed the display pattern to the wood panel and pre-drilled all the holes.
I then used hot glue to adhere the fabric to the back panel - a couple of small dabs in the corners and along the edges. Minimal use of glue here is important. I did not add any glue to the middle of the fabric. Excessive use of glue will distort the fabric and leave visible markings. I experimented with small swatches of the blue velvet and this was the best and simplest method I found.
Finally, I poked holes in the fabric with a nail where I predrilled the holes and screwed in the L hooks and label pulls.
Pretty simple and I like the way things turned out. I may add a small brass plaque at the bottom as a name plate.
Hopefully this thread helps someone in someway.
Cheers!
It’s been a while since I’ve posted anything!
Just wanted to pop on to share an idea I had in case it helps anyone with their own collection.
I’ve owned a bunch of Noble Collection HP wands for a while, but they’ve been sitting in boxes for years because I never found an elegant way (in my opinion) to display them.
I wanted something that could display multiple wands with a somewhat in-world HP theme and not take up too much space. A display you might find at Olivanders.
Most of what I’ve found of online looked like this:
Though, here are a couple photos I drew inspiration from:
To start off with, I only purchased 5 simple things:
- 18” x 24” shadowbox ($30 - local art store)
- Masonite wood panel ($5 - Home Depot)
- Peacock blue velvet fabric ($15 - AliExpress)
- Antique brass L hooks ($23 - Amazon)
- Antique brass label pulls ($5 - AliExpress)
What I did:
First off, I dipped the tips of the L hooks in some clear epoxy to give the ends a little bumper - I didn’t want the hooks to scratch the wands.
Then I took apart the shadowbox to remove the front glass - I wanted the wands to be accessible.
I had a cardboard box lying around and used it to test out the wand spacing.
This is what I ended up with for an 18” x 24” canvas:
- L hooks spaced 10” from each other, centered
- First pair of hooks are 3” from the top and each pair of subsequent hooks are spaced 2” apart from each other vertically. This also leaves 3” at the bottom which works nicely to even things out. This spacing allows for 10 wands to be displayed. Anything more or less for this frame size looked worse.
- The label pulls are also centered and evenly spaced between each L hook row.
This masonite panel was glued to the frame back board with wood glue to give the frame more weight and to add thickness for the brass L hooks to screw into.
After the glue cured, I transposed the display pattern to the wood panel and pre-drilled all the holes.
I then used hot glue to adhere the fabric to the back panel - a couple of small dabs in the corners and along the edges. Minimal use of glue here is important. I did not add any glue to the middle of the fabric. Excessive use of glue will distort the fabric and leave visible markings. I experimented with small swatches of the blue velvet and this was the best and simplest method I found.
Finally, I poked holes in the fabric with a nail where I predrilled the holes and screwed in the L hooks and label pulls.
Pretty simple and I like the way things turned out. I may add a small brass plaque at the bottom as a name plate.
Hopefully this thread helps someone in someway.
Cheers!