Thursday, February 10, 2011

The problem with horns is....

Unicorn horns.  At one point in time more valuable then gold or saffron.  To possess one was to possess immortality. Great depictions of hunts and gatherings all in the quest of obtaining such a rare and valuable commodity are depicted repeatedly throughout movies and literature. For awhile there was even advertisements of medicines and tonics claiming to be made from them.

Of course common sentiment is that unicorns aren't real and so therefor, neither are their horns.  However we have plenty of toys and images of them so it should be no problem at all for me to sculpt one out of apoxie right? I just have to look and copy what I see. I just have to follow the directions, right?

NO!!!

I just spent two hours trying to make a horn and failing miserably. I almost wasted a whole glob of apoxie. I noticed it starting to get to that "unworkable" stage and gave up on the horn and sculpted some feathers for the other wing instead.  good thing too. I was barely able to get 3 usable preening feathers out of it before the rest dried in a small, sad, little clump.

The problem with a unicorn horn is that they are based off of the Narwhal tusk, which has a long slender spiral tusk that looks exactly like what we think of today as an alicorn or "unicorn horn".  But the narwhal tusk is actually two teeth that have grown together in a spiral formation, giving it that distinctive look. So in order to sculpt one, you have to do the same thing. I was told in the tutorial I read, that you make a "snake" out of apoxie that tapers at the ends and then fold it in half and twist. Try as I might I could not get the base  the right thickness for the darned thing to stand up. and then it wanted to droop at the end.

I think next time I'm going to have to try using super sculpy III instead. It doesn't harden until you bake it and at the very least I should be able to practice with it without having to worry about it getting ruined. But this pony needs a horn and I refuse to give up on that horn.  Especially now that I've committed so much time into it that my back is killing me!

~Nichi Moondancer.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

The wings they are a changing.

So, as I said in my last post, I really feel like my wings have gotten better. Today I finished the top of one of the wings and wow! I love the shape and I love feeling like I'm growing as an artist in my sculpting abilities.  However, I just realized that the way I want to color my wings may not work now because bird wings seem to have like colors with like feathers.  I was going to have a gradiated color scheme with (in essence) horizontal stripes, but now looking at this new improved wings, I am just not sure how to do it.

Oh well. I suppose I should just let it go and finish sculpting the wings before I start stressing about color. One thing at a time. One thing at a time. I need to learn that. One thing at a time.

Night all!
~Nichi Moondancer.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Watching apoxie dry

So I'm sitting here watching apoxie dry.  Apoxie Sculpt is one of the most beloved and yet most detested substances I work with. The finished product is absolutely wonderful but it's so sticky when it's first mixed and then if you wait to long for it to set before you start sculpting you don't have enough time to get as much done as you wanted.

But I have to use it on the current custom I'm doing. It's really the only substance that allows for really good feathers on wings and this pony does have wings. Of course it had wings originally but I hated those wings so I removed them and now I'm starting on new wings. Better wings.

This is only the second set of wings that I've ever done and even though I'm just starting on this set of wings but I can already see the improvement between this set and the first set I did. I really wish that this had been my first set of wings. When I made the first set I was so proud of them, but now I can see how novice they really were. I wonder if everyone goes through this? Looks back at their previous work and see something completely different than they saw it when they first finished the piece?

Oh well, I guess I should get back to the apoxie.

Best Wishes,
Nichi Moondancer.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

De-hairing pain

Well now that the steam punk pony is done and sent off I've started work on de-hairing my next baits, A Remco Unicorn and a Starcatcher (G3 MLP). My hands are in so much pain now. The glue on the Remco mane wasn't so bad but the tail was a nightmare. I'm not used to tails being so securely fixed into a pony.  The Starcatcher was just the opposite. The tail came right out but the mane was secured with what seemed like Super Glue! It took about an hour of boiling the head off and on and making attempts at pulling the mane stubble out little bit by little bit.

My hands feel like they have been crushed by a large fat guy in cleats. And I still have news papers to fold and deliver today. I will most likely have to take an aleve or two in order to make it through the night. I don't like having to take pain pills so this is disappointing.

I really love making custom ponies but much of the process causes so much pain. plus I haven't had a commission since before Christmas.  I'm hoping that after I'm done with the latest swap that I'm in I'll have time to make some customs to sell and to finish up some personal pony projects. And hopefully I can find a way to do it pain free.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Clipping Screws

So I've found new and interesting ways to test the limits of my hands. I recently, to complete a custom pony, clipped the heads off of some brass wood screws.  While it didn't hurt at the time, I will admit it did hurt the next day and actually has continued to hurt the next few days.

Also I haven't been able to wear my hand braces for the last couple of days. I've been trying to domesticate a ferral cat and it got a little irritated with me the other day and left some puncture wounds in my hands. After trying to wear the braces in the healing process I found out the the braces press right on the wounds and it hurts worse than the arthritis does.  How is that fair?

Sometimes I have to wonder why God would give us the ability to use tools and create things only to slowly rob us of the ability later by giving us arthritis.  I think I almost had an answer earlier today, but I've lost it again.

That's about all for now. I'll try to get some pictures or something up soon of my latest pony.

Stay well,
Nichi Moondancer.