
A new fascination with orchids has brought me to the Cattleya. These  orchids are utilized in many hybrid form because of their showy  blossoms. The plant itself caught my attention, specifically as it would  exist in it's natural habitat, high in a South American rain forest  canopy where lots of sun and less water and nutrients are to be  exploited. That explains the thickened stalk or pseudo-bulb, a storage  system. This sculpture is incomplete, but the general theme carries. My  intent is to include many stages along one rhizome, so there is one with  just a hint of life peeking out of the bract, then one with several  buds, one with a bud and two blooms, one with  a stem but the blooms are  past, and finally (hidden in this view) a leafless back bulb.
The blossoms are created using a recycled 1 1/2" heavy walled copper  fire line from a steam plant. There was lots of annealing needed to  shape the 1/16 " thick copper, something new for me. The remainder of  the plant is basically mild steel sheet, and rod. The pseudo-bulbs are  made in half and welded together, the buds are made in thirds, like an  orange peel. There will be considerably more air roots, and the missing   column in the blooms will hide the nut.
I'm happy with the color of the copper flower parts, but the steel needs color, maybe a light rust and then BLO to seal it.