Video: Talented Louth teen puts a big smile on mum’s face during illness
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James Gilliatt, 15, a Year 10 student at Louth Academy, used his dad Simon’s home workshop to produce the amazing sculptures, which are a combination of twisted copper stems and beaten sheet metal work.
The copper wire is extracted from disused spools of plastic-coated wire from a local factory, and the sheet metal is offcuts from his dad’s garage.
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Hide AdThe petal work is beaten, shaped and then riveted together. The materials are 100 per cent recycled, including the wooden bases. James works all of the pieces by hand, using whatever tools are at his disposal.
He explained: “I started this at Christmas to make some flowers for my mum Carrie, who is going through breast cancer treatment and is now just finishing her chemotherapy.
“I thought I could make her some flowers to put a smile on her face and she loved them,” he said.
“It takes between three and five hours to make each piece, and I find it really relaxing to go into the workshop and make them.”
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Hide AdAnd Carrie is not the only one who was impressed with James’ designs.
Louth Academy Head of Design and Technology, Meicah Pickwell, said: “James asked if he could show me some work he had done at home and I was stunned.
“The detail and skill involved in creating these sculptures out of recycled metal is fantastic, and I had no idea that James was so skilled in using metals this way.
“He has formulated his own ideas and brought them to fruition and I am so impressed with the detail and the riveting that I have bought two of the sculptures to take home.
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Hide Ad“I am so proud of him.W e now know that in Year 11 he will definitely be specialising in metalwork for his GCSE.
“We have also talked about how he can take the sculptures further and he is thinking about trying them out on local market stalls to see how popular they are.
“I certainly don’t think he will have too much trouble selling them, they are truly beautiful.
James, whose family has a military background, is looking to join the Forces after school, but would be happy to see his hobby become a viable business.
“It would be nice,” he added modestly.