Sunday, March 15, 2009

Vivian (in color)





Vivian is all painted! She looks great, doesn't she? Tim gave me a color mock-up for me to use to match colors. Her paint scheme seems simple but the shades have light grey in them, making the colors very pastel and "powdery" looking. I think the colors make her look alot more feminine and soft.










At first , I didn't think the color scheme would look that good on the sculpture, but after I mixed the paints and matched the colors from the model, I started to like them! Nice job, Tim.











Her eyes really stand out now that she is painted. She looks focused and alert! I put a gloss finish on her eyes, mouth, and teeth.











Yes, she has panties. Be sure to check the little video turnaround of her in the Video Bar!




Vivian was a fun project. I'm glad she turned out well and Tim was really happy with her.

Good times! JUDO-CHOP!!

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Li'l Indy and Kodos...and some worms!


One year when I was at home in North Dakota over Christmas break, I bought some of the pre-colored sculpey to experiment with. I made some simple animals like a pig, a hippo, a bird- just to see how the stuff handles. I made one for each of my brother Marc's little girls. When I got back I sculpted this little German shepherd pup with the stuff for a friend's birthday. He's modeled after my own shep, Indiana.

The colored stuff is great because you don't have to paint anything once it's baked. However, it gets really soft really fast and becomes kind of difficult to put any real details on the sculpt itself.

Since it does get really soft, you can easily blend and swirl two colors together. I tried to kinda blend the colors of the pup's tummy fur together to see if I could make it look more like hair.

The pics don't really show it but the blue sculpey in the tile floor has a pearly iridescent color to it that's pretty cool. It made the tile really contrast with the texture of the puppy.



I think if you really wanted to do detailed stuff with the colored sculpey, it might work better to sculpt the piece in phases and put the whole thing in the fridge for a bit between each session. Then you could pick it up and handle it a little better before the sculpey absorbs the heat from your hands and gets too soft to work with again. It works great to crank little fun little things with though!



Big Indy and Li'l Indy.



Another kind of sculpey I tried playing with was the bendable sculpey. After you bake it, it stays rubbery so you can bend longer pieces and they don't break! First I made these worms.
Then I made this little sculpt of Kodos from Simpsons. I figured his tentacles would be fun to bend around and play with.
The bendable stuff works great. But like the other colored sculpey, it gets really soft and is hard to detail with. It's fun to make stuff and crank on it when your done though. The stuff won't break! It just bends!

I gave Kodos to my buddy and fellow-Simpsonite, Ernie Keen, as a surprise. He was surprised!



DOG NOT TO SCALE