Just a quick sneak peak at a future sales piece; A 'Tiny' by Sarah Rose to a silver bay minimum sabino. He is based on the Gypsy Vanner Stallion Silver Bullet.
0 Comments
Today I want to let you all in on what I think is a far too well hidden trick in our hobby: Foam! Expanding foam insulation to be exact, also known as space invading foam. This stuff is fabulous for filling holes (read "CMers dream")! I learned of this trick from Bluebird Studios blog & had to try it myself. That was several months ago & it has definitely been added to my 'toolbox' of techniques. The foam I found right off the bat was Touch 'n Foam No Warp Window & Door Sealant which is awesome because it is reusable; most foams are once you open it, use it or loose it because you can't store it. Albeit this one doesn't last forever; you do have to use it up in about three weeks, but that's a heck of a lot better than all in one day! I'd just gotten a new can for some projects, so I can show you a, pretty, brand new can. It has a trigger gadget that you screw onto the top & a straw that fits over that, & your ready to roll. You WILL need to wear gloves (I always go powderless since I use them for finishing too & you don't want dusty hands when finishing your perfect paintjob!). This stuff is like the best glue on the planet & you will not be getting it off your hands! You also must have a respirator since the stuff smells horrid (I think the can said something about c02. Don't be doing this around any flames regardless!), & eye protection since I don't even want to know what this stuff could do to eyes if is managed to splatter or something. This is my Darth Vader get up! I highly suggest you invest in a pair of goggles & a respirator, not merely a dust mask; they have a tendency to just trap dust & fumes under them. A respirator & goggles really do come in handy for everything. I use mine when Demeling, heat-&-moving (since the plastic has a tendency to smoke a bit), foaming, & sometimes (probably should be on a regular basis actually) sanding & spraying primer & finish. In my defence, I do do both of those in good outdoor ventilation, but I still probably should wear them. You'll also need some sort of a 'drop cloth', news print or something. I used a torn open paper grocery sack. Trust me, you don't want to have to try to get this foam off of any flooring you may care about. The primary victim of the day was a Cantrell 'Rastus' that is here for a hair do. He will be a mold master, so I was given the less than perfect cast since all he has to do in life is be molded. But he had a thinner-than-I-was-comfortable-with head so I wanted to fill it with foam before I was handling him for sculpting hair. Since you do have to use the foam up in a few weeks I grabbed a couple others that have been hanging around; A Baby Flo who's getting a moved head/neck, the other is a Smart Chic Oleana who is getting a whole new neck. So nothing all too major today (actually this was a few days ago). I have used this foam for some really drastic stuff that I'll get to in a mo. }:] Position the straw where you'd like to foam & pull the trigger. It will come out fast & immediately start to expand. Let the trigger go before you have as much as you want, the foam will continue to come out for a few seconds after you let go. Do make an effort to not get it anywhere you don't want it. It is far easier to get it off of a model than your skin, but why make more work for yourself? When you're finished with the foam for the day, gently bend the straw back over itself & pop it over the knob on top. Voila! Saved for a later date! Back to the horses, after an hour or two you can touch the foam, but don't do anything to it yet, the inside is still not cured; wait 'til the next day. Once it's sure to be cured you can rip it off, cut it off, or push it in. (TIP: I've been saving the excess & using them as packing peanuts!!) You can trim it down & leave enough to be part of your armature, or you can take it all off. With the CMs I will trim most of it down, attach the supportive wire into the foam, & once the glue & epoxy is set I will sculpt over it as usual. For Rastus I just need to fill in the hole I made to add the foam. Now, you can go pretty crazy CMing with this stuff on your side. These were the first victims I ever tried using the foam on (below). They are a couple of Merrylegs, heat-&-moved to be pulling ponies (like the drafties but in pony size; look it up!). All these cuts make the model very unstable since some places only have a small bit of plastic yet connecting it to the model. Add foam & this is the evil looking creation I got! But it worked very well! It held everything together & supported the more fragile parts. I was able to sculpt right over the foam & move on with my CMs lickety split. With the success of these guys, I have been using it for filling anything that needs it such as tail wire holes & the gaps left from cutting out manes & tails. But I was curious; how crazy COULD you get?? Answer? Extremely! Yes my friends, that is an Imperador das Aguas JM from BF. I adore Marchadors, I have been a fan of them since I learned of the breed in 2011. But this sculpt fell short of my expectations. I really do love Mink's sculpts, but this guy is not on my top favorite list. To me, he looks far too short in the back & barrel, way too long in the neck, a smidge too short in the leg, WAAAAAAAY too skinny, & that funky head gets me. So, I decided to make it better! I cut him down his mold seam, took off his tail & head, then put his body back together widening it with bits of popsicle sticks to prop it up (removing them once the foam cured) & packing-taping it together long enough to foam away! Once that cured I cut his barrel in two to lengthen his back & barrel, braced it together with a dowel rod inside, taped the halves together & foamed that too. I heated his head to straighten the odd dip in his jaws, then foamed it together with the popsicle sticks & tape to widen it as well, then wired it back onto his neck. I heated & straightened his fetlocks to lengthen his legs, wired on his tail at a lower set, Dremeled off here, & epoxy added there. He is not finished, but her looks MUCH better to me now! SO! Yes! The possibilities are endless for expanding foam! I hardly hear of anyone using it, so I wanted to share it with you all! P.S. The particular foam that I use is fire retardant. I wanted to put that to the test to know what I could get away with if I needed/wanted to heat-&-move anything after having foamed a horse. Back in December of 2016 I took a chunk of cured foam outside to a safe concrete patch, bucket of water at hand, & took the heat gun to it. I used the heat gun much closer, for much longer, at a much higher temp than I ever EVER would on a model horse. It burnt up, as in toasted brown & black & shriveled up to a nasty looking wad, smoked like heck (I certainly would not suggest heating it indoors), but it never actually caught fire. I did not try an actual flame on it since that would never be something that I would need to do. I won't be held accountable if you burn your house down or asphyxiate yourself on fumes, but my conclusion has led me to be able to do a little heat-&-moving afterwards on some models. BE SURE to wear a respirator (which I do regardless because of the smoky fumes that can come off of the plastic): it is not a pleasant odor that the foam emits when heated & it's probably seven different kinds of terrible for you too. Also be aware that the fumes from the foam can are very flammable too. I tested this on a cured piece of foam, not anything fresh from the can. PLEASE NOTE: Some expanding foam absolutely IS flammable!! My experiment was only on 'Touch n' Foam No Warp Window & Door Sealant' & NO OTHERS. Heat it & any others at your own risk. ...Isn't it lovely how many different ways our hobby can kill you? ;) Press Release ![]() Had to mention that my CM Copperfox Cob, SWF To Boldly Go, is in the spotlight on the CF blog. :) Go 'Foxy'! http://www.copperfoxmodelhorses.com/our-blog/copperfox-in-the-show-ring-swf-to-boldly-go Thank you Becky for a lovely write up! Spring Is In The Air Can't leave you without a dose of nature! These happy little flowers are Spring Beauties, blooming off the corner of my house. I couldn't resist photographing them with my new camera. This picture is deceiving; these guys are actually a smidge smaller than my fingerprint! & THIS is a Polyphemus moth cocoon! Mom found it on Monday in a bunch of daylilies she was moving, it's been living in my workroom ever since. S/he's been rat'lin' 'round in there!! I can't believe it hasn't come out yet! But sometime soon, I'm sure, I'll have a moth picture for you guys!
While I would be very surprised if she ever were to read it, I would like to wish Her Majesty The Queen a very Happy 91st Birthday! I admire her greatly; she is an amazing woman as well as a fellow horse lover. A very Happy Birthday Ma'am. ![]() Photograph of Queen Elizabeth II riding to trooping the colour for the last time in July 1986. The queen rode the same horse, 'Burmese', originally presented by Canadian government, from 1969 to 1986. With Charles, Prince of Wales, on the white horse to the left, and Philip, Duke of Edinburgh on the bay horse behind the Queen. PHOTO CREDIT Sandpiper. This work has been released into the public domain by its author, Sandpiper at the Wikipedia. This applies worldwide. In case this is not legally possible: Sandpiper grants anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law. https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:ElizabethIItroopingcolour.jpg It's been a little quiet on the blog here lately. Nothing I consider all of too exciting is going on right at the mo. I am judging a MEPSA AR/CM qualifier... Sorting, counting, noting, & just generally trying to stay organized before the judging actually started. Which is always fun. Hoping to write a little something about judging a photo show here soon, but not ready for that yet. :) Of course the beat rolls on in the studio, but also not ready to share anything there either. The most excitement has been a few purchases on my part. All really good deals, a trait which I pride myself on to tell the truth! ;) I bought a Classic scale second mold 'Conquest V1' Friesian stallion, a Trad 'Heart's Afire' filly, & a MM 'Albus', all to hoard for myself. Also bought a Surprise Foal SM family set mostly just because I wanted the Reiner for a CM idea that I can't shake, but the Dungaree is a happy bonus! The Cantering Foal, well, I have a handful of them but he'll find his place in this world! I am such a sucker for Friesians! Found out that my guy is the tweaked 2nd-mold version of Conquest V1. Heart's Afire is one I have wanted for over a decade! I couldn't pass on the great deal this gal was & I am happy to call her my own now! & what can I say, I am fond of Albus! I wanted to paint one for myself in the color I always imagined him in! Also a couple weeks ago bought two Mego dolls to eventually go with a performance set that's a WIP; a sales piece that is spoken for. They'll get an overhaul to bring them up to snuff, but I am pleased with them! Did you spot the two unaccounted for ponies in the group shot above? Did the one look a little familiar? I part traded some 'cloths' for the Mini Fabrizio for Kim's NaMoPaiMo Albus! Man I love my new camera! I'm sloooowly getting the hang of it. This is a pretty darn good pic of Albus taken in my workroom! He is the second of my friend Kim's pieces that I am proud to own! He is beautiful too! Such a lovely smooth & shaded bay! Yum Yum! Rastus doesn't quite know what to think of his new little NaMoPaiMo brother! Speaking of Kim & NaMoPaiMo, she recently finished the Ground Effects that she was also working on while doing Albus. Since Ground Effects made a WIP appearance on my blog I thought it fit to show her off finished too. She is staying in Kim's collection, with the handle of KP Palindrome. I love everything about her, but I especially like her base! It's the nicest Ground Effects base I've seen so far! I think that's about it for news right now. I feel like I'm cobbling together a blog post this time, but I hope you enjoyed it nonetheless! With luck in the coming weeks there will be a post on behind the scenes of a photo show, & painting a black horse (since am acquiring a herd of future blacks! Six at last count!). So check back soon! Cheers all, & happy Spring! Not the greatest of pictures, taken on my phone last year, but this glorious beast (an Amaryllis) blooms like clockwork every spring at Local Roots, the local produce co-op in Wooster. If I get the opportunity I will get a pic of it with my camera this year. Unfortunately they don't have it in as picturesque a spot this year.
I know, unheard of right?? But I suddenly have news! I have a P.O. Box for business stuff so things don't get miss-delivered somewhere along my road. I do check it, but when I know my Mom is going uptown I ask her to check for me, which was the case today. I am judging a MEPSA show on Saturday so I knew there would be packages waiting for me. As anticipated, Mom came home with a bag full of show envelopes. ...& one box of tea??? I was wondering why she put tea in my mail bag until I realized it was a tiny package! A tiny package from Jennifer Buxton! It was a little Devil's Advocate!! & a very sweet note from Jennifer! THANK YOU Jennifer!!! I was not expecting anything at all from NaMoPaiMo, let alone a little resin pony! & thank you Maggie too, for donating her! I will definitely give her some new cloths!
I'm so excited!! :D Hey all! So I am going to make an honest attempt at keeping up this blog. I've kinda' gotten a little more into it since NaMoPaiMo, but I do know I will get busy & distracted at some point. I'm going to make an effort though! So today I am just going to show off this little girl. A CM Love CAF to a Grevy's Zebra. ...I have got to be insane. I am still learning the ropes to my new camera, the color isn't quite right, but you can absolutely see that the, what? Eighth? Of her that I have started painting is basically all hair-by-hair. &, yes, that is sculpted baby fuzz you are seeing. :) These guys, Grevy's, are really pretty! They have the finest, most memorizing stripes of all the Zebra breeds, & those cute little 'mickey mouse' ears. Babies have this variation of color through their stripes that goes from tan to brown to black to brown again, & that ruff continuing their mane down their back to their tail. The future of this kid isn't decided yet, but she will most likely be a sales piece (I am seriously fighting the urge to keep her!). Other than the fact that she will most likely be for sale whenever she's finished, nothing else is figured out yet. There is someone interested in her, though I had thought of putting her up for offers. We shall see. Until then, enjoy the WIP pics! Bonus picture: The first Garter Snake of the year! :)
Hello all! Saturday was the NYB, usually the only show I make it to in the year, & as always I had a great time! This was the 8th year for this show, & I have been to each & every one of them. It has grown over the years to become quite impressive & this year's edition was no exception. Soo many drool-worthy ponies! A few start-of-the-show shots of the show hall & my table. Having a nice new camera to play with I made good use of it! AND it has a neck strap! Being so handy, I managed to take more pictures than I have ever before! (good news for you, right?) I am not at all familiar with this new bad boy, so they may not be perfect, but I can tell you one thing: they are a far sight better than what my point & shoot would have done! I had a good show & my ponies made me proud, winning several divisional champs & reserves & three over alls as well! My various sales Aggies & Sundaras got a good deal of attention with a couple folks really holding back on taking one home with them (hope y'all come back later, she's waiting for you! ;) ), & a Mini Elnathan finally found his new home at this show. Before I go further on this report, since NaMoPaiMo was a somewhat big event on my humble little blog, I would like to give Rastus the spotlight for a moment! He was not the biggest winner of the day, but he did prove himself, winning both Breed & Workmanship firsts in his class! He did not go onto champ, but I must say, the Andre that took top honors is GORGEOUS, & my Aggie AR Sugar took the reserve, so I have nothing to complain about here! Okey dokey! Brace yourselves, here's the rest of the show pics! MANY of them! They are in something close to order of the show... I was getting confused when uploading them. Below this album is an album of just my horses if you don't want to wade through all of the days show pics. I try to give artists credit when I can. As I find who's who I continue to add names. If you know who sculpted, CMd, or painted a horse, please feel free to let me know! & here are just my horses (all the same pics as Above, just on their own now). Horses by me that I own, horses by me that others own, horses I own done by others, & my didley few OFs that managed to make the ribbons. (I'm not a big OF person. I actually think I will quit showing all but a handful of them.) I did miss taking a few pics, coming immediately to mind is my 2010 OS 'SWF The Lady From Bristol' who took both seconds in AR Paint, my Vingerling MM Friesian 'SWF Carmen who took a second, & my OF silver filigree Web SR Alpine that managed a fifth. My personal showstring's tally for the day was 15-1sts (7 in breed & 8 in workmanship), 13-2nds (6 in breed & 7 in wrk), 9-3rds, 5-4ths, 3-5ths, 3 division champs (2 in breed & 1 in wrk), 2 div reserves (1 in breed & 1 in wrk), & three over all reserve champs (2 in breed & 1 in wrk.), with 13 breed NAN cards & 15 workmanship NAN cards. I always proxy for my friend Jo, & her horses kicked butt this year! Below is an album of just her various horses (which were also in the above show album). Jo's showstring tally was 14-1sts (6 in breed & 8 in wrk), 6-2nds (1 in breed & 5 in wrk), 3-3rds, 0-4ths, 7-5ths, 2 div champs (both in wrk), 4 div resrvs (3 in breed & 1 in wrk), & 1 O/A res (in wrk), with 7 breed NAN cards & 13 wrk NAN cards. For some years now I have donated a CM to the NYB Raffle. For this year, Chesna, one of the two show holders, asked if I would paint a Mini Amir Jamaal from the collection of the late Mary Sue Barnum & I agreed. I don't usually do an overly all out detailed paint job on raffle pieces, but I made an exception with this guy as he is in memory of my friend. I really fell in love with him & even put in a load of tickets for him myself! But true to form, I didn't win a thing from the raffle, least of all this guy. The lucky person to have their named called was Kelly Weimer! Enjoy him Kelly! I hope he does well for you! :) The raffle raised $350 for Our Mims, $350 for Re Ride, & the extra from the proceeds were donated to the church which has housed the NYB all these years. The fateful moment! Congratulations Kelly Weimer!! The show moved along really well this year, finishing at 4 or 5 I think? Having started at 8. It's an exhausting day, & by the end of the day every part of me hurts since I don't get more than 20 or 30 minutes during lunch to actually sit, but it's always a good time! To see all the horses & people, some friends that I don't see often, & look at what may be for sale at tables. It's all good. Everything starts to break down as soon as the show starts, so towards the end the ponies are getting scant as they are packed away after they show. By the end of the show there is nothing left, no horses, no bins, no tables, all gone & put away. I usually wind up buying something at the show. Nothing too exciting came home with me this time, but I did buy an OF starry night that I have fun plans for! ;)
I would like to thank ALL of the judges for their time! Without you there woud be no show! I would also like to thank Chesna & Chunk for holding such a wonderful show all these years. Next year the NYB will be under new management, you guys deserve the break! Thanks for reading all! Cheers! ![]() The end crowns the work: The true value of an undertaking or a work of art cannot be fully discerned until it is finished. Today marks the end of the first ever National Model Paining Month. It has been beyond amazing to see so many artists, professional & novice, participate in painting a pony for February. I think no matter if you finish before midnight or continue into March, whether your pony turned out just as you dreamed, or fell short of your expectations, this has been a roaring success for all. I learned a lot from what others have been kind enough to share this month, & had a ton of fun watching the progression of so many horses. I completed my Rastus yesterday, & I promised to have better pictures for you today, so here they are. :) ...I have a little, sort of related, confession to make: I broke down & bought myself a Canon Rebel T6 last month. I absolutely had to have a new camera, there was no going on with my over-a-decade-old-&-seriously-senile Nikon point & shoot. I about went into a coma spending the money on it & the accessories, & have now spent over a month being too scared to touch it! But today I have overcome my fear & taken my first pictures with my new treasure! ....I'm in love!!! The pics were still taken after dark in my glowingly well lit workroom, but oh my!!! They are stunning!! There's no turning back now!!!! The color is very very close to accurate, but he's still a little bitty-bit dark because I didn't have a lamp on the left & was far too lazy to tear my workroom apart to move one over there. Still, these are some really good pictures of him! I am incredibly pleased with Rastus, he turned out exactly how I wanted him & with no fuss at all (I guess under that grumpy exterior, he's really a nice guy!). I learned how to use pastel to add dapples & other soft layers over my oil coat with this guy, techniques that I plan to add to my daily painting repertoire. I'm really looking forward to showing my fella on Saturday at the New Year's Bash!! To commemorate his completion, I put together a slideshow of him from raw AR to finished showpiece: I'm not the only one who has a finished NaMoPaiMo project to show off today. I would now like to hand the screen over to Kim for her last report on Albus! NaMoPaiMo Update Week 4 Albus is complete! He got his multiple coats of sealer, along with having his eyes, nostrils, and hooves glossed on Saturday. A big thank you to Jennifer for hosting NaMoPaiMo! And to Carissa for encouraging me to participate and sharing her blog with me :) Thank you also, to all the artists who shared their wisdom in such wonderful tutorials. What a great community! Kim Prosek You are more than welcome Kim, & I totally agree with you on what a great community we have in the model horse world! I think your Albus turned out fabulous too! Speaking of finished ponies! Coming in under the wire is Jennifer's Aggie! & ohhhhh my!!! For being so leery of oils, & about ready to toss in the paint brushes at one point, this girl has turned out to be amazing!!! Please please go look at her Aggie on Jennifer's blog here!!! I can not believe she's not more practiced at painting, let alone in oils!! This horse looks so good!!
Thank you Jennifer for hosting the NaMoPiaMo! It was truly something special! ...I hope it didn't drive you too crazy! & congratulations to everyone who participated in NaMoPaiMo! Go forth & paint ponies for the world! Yesterday was details day for Rastus! M&T was painted & shaded in oils & a little white pastel. His white face was finished off with my 'ticking' mix (watered down white gesso, burnt umber acrylic, antique bronze Pearl-Ex, & gloss acrylic varnish) & pinked with a little burnt sienna oil. & his decorations were colored in with classic gold Precious Metals Premium Leafing Paint, & two shades of 'verdigris' blue acrylic mixed to my taste with metallic acrylic, platinum Precious Metals, & silver Pearl-Ex added for shimmer. & just so you know... All those decorations... Flowers, roll, roll tails, forelock, & bow... Took about six hours to finish! :P But, by this morning this is what I had! :) Please ignore the stupid quotation mark that slipped in unwelcomed to my copyrighting this round! }:| & after several more meticulous hours of carefully spraying the last layer of finish, & making sure it was flawless (cursed dust & hair!!), & adding that last detail of realism; glossing eyes, nostrils, & feet, & varnishing M&T & the decorations, I am happy to announce that with a day to spare, Rastus is FINISHED!!! May I introduce to you my newest addition to my showstring... SWF Apollo's Lyre. I plan to try to get better pictures of him tomorrow, & eventually I will get good & proper show pictures of him. Right now, I have other horses to get to: I will be attending the New Year's Bash Live on Saturday & would like to have a few more pieces finished before then. If you will be at the Bash, feel free to drop by my table & say hi to Rastus!
Happy last few hours of NaMoPaiMo everyone!! Getting cloooooooser! ;) Rastus got the thin start of his white face mapped in a few days ago. As of yesterday he's looking back at me. The start to various parts of his hair was also added yesterday. Today His legs finally have a start on catching up with the rest of him. Also blacked his feet which are blessedly show polished; no growth rings to detail! SO! Finish shading his legs, add chestnuts, finish shading his topline, paint his hair, paint his decorations, finish off his white face & black feet, sign him, seal it all one last time, gloss eyes, nostrils, hooves, & he'll be done! We might just make it before the end of February! & now for the latest from my friend Kim! NaMoPaiMo Update Week 3 Hi! Just a quick update on Albus. After binge watching Netflix for most of the weekend I figured I should finish painting the details on him. Albus is almost complete! This week I'll put a few more coats of matte sealer on him, gloss his eyes, hooves, and nostrils and he'll be finished. :) Kim Prosek Wow! I think he looks fabulous Kim!!! :D We're closing in on the end of NaMoPaiMo, so tune in for more updates soon! Happy painting all! Shaded his topline & a few low areas last night. This morning he got a couple layers of finish. I alternated Testors, Crystal Clear, & Testors this time. I think he's going to move pretty fast from here on out. I am exceptionally pleased with him so far!
Stay tuned! The NaMoPaiMo fun continues! :) I've been quiet on here for nearly a week now. Rastus is going quite well! Still working on dapples, & being distracted by other ponies to paint & CM! I mostly just have his right hip to dapple yet, plus a few random ones to add here & there, & darken, lighten, & fade some, all mostly on the right side. Once the dapples are laid down & caught up with the left side I will spray another layer of Dull Coat & continue darkening them, either with more pastel or with oil, haven't decided yet. Here's what I have so far. Sweet mercy, these are HORRIBLE pictures!! I always seem to take pics after sundown, & my studio lighting makes my camera catch him looking stark yellow with ring dapples! Yich! In person he is a rather pleasant honey chestnut with nice soft dapples. Someday I will get a true picture for you! :P I'm pretty happy with him! He's being a surprisingly easy pony to paint so far! Good boy Rastus! ;) & now for another update from my friend Kim! NaMoPaiMo Update Week 2 Hi, I have to say I'm loving all the tutorials that are being posted. I love to see all the different methods and procedures and I've taken a little something from each. I almost feel as if I'm cheating! I will definitely be trying out the toothbrush fleabits and colored pencil method for more body work. I've used pencils on hooves and mane/tails, but I think I might try dapples with them! Well, Albus got prepped and primed again this past week. Friday, I put a basecoat on him. I'm glad I listened to my gut and started over on him. Who knew bays were so difficult! But, mistakes are a great teacher and I'm grateful that this challenge has made me face painting a bay. Saturday and Sunday consisted of many, many layers of pastels. Van dyke brown, burnt sienna, and a mixture of the two. Black points on his legs were started with acrylic. And gone over with many layers of black pastel. And finally, Albus is to the point where just the details are left to paint. Starting over with a much lighter base was a good call for me. With the original dark base I had, I couldn't figure out how to build his color. By going lighter, I was able to work my way up to the bay in my reference pic. Ok, enough rambling for now. Thanks again to Carissa for letting me bend her ear and her constant encouragement to keep going! Kim Prosek Very welcome Kim! Thanks for updating us all on your pony, sorry it took me a couple days to get it posted! I think he looks fantastic!! & I couldn't agree with you more on enjoying the tutorials folks have been sharing this month!
Check back for more updates soon! Happy NaMoPaiMo! The NaMoPaiMo fun continues! I have been pastelling dapples on Rastus &, pastel or oil, dapples take T I M E. *sigh* It is going quite well though & I am happy! This is all new ground for me, pastelling, & only the third time I've tried it for dappling, or anything else for that matter, so I am more or less winging it. But I'll share what I am doing. I got several different colors of pastel the other day, not being too sure what I would need or use. I came home with black & white (which I knew I would need), burnt umber, permanent red light (doesn't that sound like your worse nightmare at a stoplight?), orange, light orange, & yellow ochre, & I already had raw sienna, an unknown, wrapperless brown, & light brown & dark brown charcoal. Before ruining Rastus, I tested out my colors on a piece of paper & wrote their names over them. Here's a picture of my test sheet, brushes, razor, & glove that I am using. I'm using different brushes for different colors, & different uses; I've actually added a few since I took the above pic. I shaved down a bit of all the colors & took ones I thought would work best to mix the colors that I am using at the moment. I have a light first coat color, which is a mix of light orange, yellow ochre, & raw sienna. & a darker color that I am using for the bolder dapples, it is a mix of light orange & the mystery wraperless brown. To start, I get a little of the light mix dust on a 18/0 round & brush on some circles. Any way you do them, you do not want perfect round circles, or anything in any sort of a straight line, the eye will reject them. Instead, stagger them, make them vary a little in size & shape. This will look much more realistic when finished. I brush on the first light circles, brush off the excess, & since I want them to fade out the further down on him they go, I will start darkening them, not quite to the furthest edge, with another coat of the light mix. He is also going to vary in shade in different places as per the real thing (& I like a well contrasted paint job too), so it is not uniform in any way. Next I will go over the even darker spots with the current dark mix & a 5/0 round (I'm just using what I have in the way of brushes). It absolutely will go darker, but I am not sure if I will do it with with pastel, or oil, or maybe a combination of them in layers. It's an adventure! This is what I have so far (below). Don't scream, it is not that obnoxious in real life; the lack of daylight & strong indoor lighting made this pic look much more lurid than it is in person. Also a lot more 'polka-dotty'! :P Just bare with me! It will turn out well! :) I will continue with his dapples today, so check back for a new post soon! Happy painting! Post Script: ![]() I don't know how I've gone this long without mentioning it! But I am sure going to change that right now! ;) I have to point out that Jennifer Buxton, who is of course the creator of NaMoPaiMo, has chosen a SWF Dream Again aka Aggie resin, sculpted by me, as her victim of the month. I couldn't be more pleased to see 'my baby' in the lime light! Jennifer is trying her hand at oils, & so far I think she has done a fantastic job on Aggie! Check it out on Jennifer's Breymere Custom Saddlery blog here! Aggie is still available for order up/up. Please see the 'Artist Resin' page for further details! As I mentioned yesterday, I have been lightly touching on the world of pastels. What I'm interested in doing with it is dappling & I have used it on a few minis with great success. I wanted to see if it would work as well on a Trad, & Rastus is the lucky guanine pig. I had planned on testing this out yesterday, but of course, the few pastels & charcoals I have here were the wrong shades to even pretend to match him. So this necessitated a voyage to the one craft store in my area that has pastel chalk. ...Rastus came along to make sure I got the right colors. After some errand running, I finally got home to play with my new acquisitions. With a smidgen of trial & error to mix the right color & find the right brush, I am pleased with the results so far. There is still going to be plenty of tinkering with it yet, so don't judge them too harshly! I have a pretty good idea of what I am aiming for, & how I will achieve it. I'm looking forward to continuing with them tomorrow, so check back again!
![]() Continuing on the NaMoPaiMo journey of Rastus, Saturday, day four of NaMoPaiMo, his oils had dried & I sprayed him in two coats of Testor's Dull Coat to seal it on good. I, for one, struggle with dust, especially on these light colors, they are like white dress pants; they show EVERYTHING! It doesn't matter how careful I am or what cleaning I do, dust & particles always manage to find their was onto paint & finish. So I spend a good deal of time scrupulously going over my pieces before & after spraying, carefully picking off unwanted specks with my carbide scraper & paper quilling tool (used for sculpting!). Thus was his day 4 progress! Not much has changed to look at him, so pictures are not really needed. I spent Sunday playing with a few other model projects, so Rastus got a day off. Today I plan to experiment; I have just started tentatively playing with pastel & charcoal for dappling on some minis, & that has rewarded me with some fantastic results! Now I want to see if it will work on a Trad. I have a few pastel chalks & charcoals laying around, but certainly not any sort of a rainbow, so I am not even sure I will have the right shades. But we shall see! ;) Now I would like to introduce my friend Kim Prosek of MT; a pastel model horse artist, who sells her creations on eBay from time to time. I really love her work & own one of her pieces! He has, in his yet short show career, become a MEPSA International Reserve Champion for me at the last Champ show! Kim is also of the non-facebook crowd, so I offered to share my blog with her to showcase her NaMoPaiMo progress as well! Her victom, er, subject, is an 'Albus' sculpted by Maggie Bennett, which she plans to be a bay. Without further ado, here is Kim: NaMoPaiMo Update Week 1 Hi! I thought I would give a weekly update on the "progress" of Albus. Needless to say, it has been one step forward, two steps back (or maybe 3 or 4). I had him primed and ready to go for this weekend after much fighting with static. It has been cold and extremely dry here in Montana, so every hair and fiber managed to find its way onto him. Saturday, I got a basecoat down (woohoo!) but....I hated the color. What a horrible, garish, not natural color! So I let him set. Sunday, I tried a layer of pastels to see if he could be salvaged. I wasn't feeling it, at all. I decided to bite the bullet and strip him (hence the yellow ziploc). Everything came off beautifully. And I mean everything. All the holes and seams I had filled, I had to refill because the bondo got stripped out. *sigh* Well, I've refilled all the holes and have him primed again! My strategy this time is going to be a little different. I'm going to start with a much lighter base and build the color up with pastels. I'll let you know how that goes. ;) In the meantime, I've been working on another MM. Maggie Bennett's micro 'Ground Effects'. While I was basing Albus, I got Effects basecoat done on Saturday too. Sunday, while Albus was off to his spa day *ehem*, I got Effects markings drawn in and a good chunk of the color filled in. While she isn't my NaMoPaiMo entry (I wish she was!), I'm extremely happy with her so far. She still has a long way to go but I'm looking forward to it. I'm hoping some of Effects good looks will rub off on Albus! Thanks to Carissa for all her patience and advice! Kim Prosek You are very welcome Kim, though I don't know how much help I've been! Your Ground Effects looks great! & I'm sure Albus will turn out well, round two!
Stay tuned for updates on Rastus & Albus! Happy painting all! As promised, here is the full account of how Rastus got his first layer of oils yesterday. As I said in an earlier post, I mix all of my paint in bulk so I don't have to mix a new batch every time I want to paint (it takes a hunk of time to do it!), thus I don't have any 'how-tos' on mixing paint for you. But I can describe it. But first, remember how I said that Haffy blond does not follow my usual painting recipe? Usually in oil (or at least how I do it) you start with a layer of body color; it is the 'middle' color of your horse & fairly close to your base coat color. Then to the high points of the horse, such as the muscle masses, you add highlight; this is the brightest color of your horse. Then to the low points of your horse, such as muscle grooves, you add the shading; this is the darkest color of your horse beside any dark skin or black points such as on bay. With this in mind, I can shift up & down the 'scale' of color to do different shades & colors with a lot of the same paint. What is body for one horse may be shading for a lighter horse. What is body for another could be highlight for the darker colored horse. Does that make sense? With that said, here is my composite palette for Rastus: Above is my "companion dilute" mix; it is my highest 'scale' of color for painting 'reds' (which is a portion of buckskins, palominos, & duns). I use it with some of the colors from my "bay/red" mix (below) for the aforementioned colors. Now below is my "bay/red" mix. This is what I use for all but the occasional odd shades of bay & red, & also for golden palomino & buckskin. Most of the time the red brown is the body, the 'gold' is the highlight, & the dark brown is the shading, with the black for thin skinned areas & black points. With a little variation of the color of the base coat & amount of what color oils you put over it, you can get several different shades out of this. & similarly, by changing the color of the points on the exact same paint job you can get gold palomino or a red chestnut, or a liver chestnut or rich bay. In most cases you start with whatever the middle color may be & work 'out' to light & dark. Then after the first layer of oils has dried, you can add more depth to it with either another light layer of the highlight & shading, or you can go darker with black for the shading or lighter with the 'yellow' for the highlight. It really does take a sense of learned intuition to a point to know what to do to get the result you are looking for. (Not what you wanted to hear, I'm sure!) I will have to post a session of painting a bay at some point to show how a 'normal' color goes! As for mixing color, that would be a challenge to explain without doing it & taking pictures to illustrate. I will say that my brands of choice are Van Gogh & Masters Touch (the Hobby Lobby house brand). Colors vary from brand to brand, so I like having both around. I have also had one brand (Winton) that was very lurid in its colors & definitely affected my results. I avoid it, btw. I only use six colors of oil: titanium white, carbon black, burnt umber, raw sienna, burnt sienna, & naples yellow, but for blacks I will add a couple & use some blues. I also add a good deal of Pearl-Ex powder, which is a metallic powder that adds shimmer to your coats. It also helps to dry the paint. Which leads me to the fact that I do not add any dryer or anything else to my paint. Honestly, they scare me. Have you read those bottles?? eap! It may take a day or two, but the paint does dry fine without it. Plus, I always wonder if my palettes would last as long (I pop the mixed paint in the freezer!) if it had dryer in it. I can use a bulk mix for more than half a year. My various oil paints & Pearl-Ex colors. TIP: Use binder clips to hang your oil tubes, they are MUCH more manageable that way! I honestly can't remember what went into the mixes above, I did them a couple months ago, I can give a fair guess though: Red brown would be mostly or purely burnt sienna with antique bronze &/or aztec gold Pearl-Ex. Dark brown would be burnt umber with black & antique bronze & carbon black Pearl-Ex. Gold would be mostly or purely raw sienna with aztec gold Pearl-Ex. Black is carbon black & nothing else; with out Pearl-Ex it looks even more black (since it's not bouncing any more light). Both the yellows, though they are a little different, are naples yellow & white with aztec gold & micropearl Pearl-Ex (NOTE: I much prefer pearlwhite to micropearl for anything but I am having a hard time getting it.) White is white with micropearl Pearl-Ex. Cream... that one's going to be difficult to pinpoint. It is white with either a touch of burnt umber &/or antique bronze Pearl-Ex, but don't hold me to it. All this is mixed with a palette knife on a sheet of palette paper, which is like super strength wax paper; you don't want anything that will soak up the oil in your paint, so don't use paper or even wax paper for your palette. Fold the paper in half & mix on one half & the crease only; then you can fold it over & put it in a ziploc in the freezer for keeping. (Make sure to write what the color is & when it was mixed on the paper.) Note: you don't need to worry about defrosting your oil before painting, it does not freeze solid & thaws out very quickly. Note number two: Use a clip board to hold your palette paper for easy use. You can even clip the other end to the board with a cloths pin or binder clip. I use mini hardware clips (those orange tipped 'industrial cloths pins!'). But anyway! Back to Rastus! HIS body color was the cream from the companion dilute mix. I have quite an arsenal of brushes & some of them are well broke as you can see below! Unlike with acrylic, frizzy is an asset in oils! It is easier to blend colors once they get frizzy, but new ones do work. The name of the game with oil is THIN. & to clarify, I mean thin layers, NOT thinned paint. You do not want or need gobs of paint over your base coat, which is one of the reasons you should make an effort to mix your base close to the body color you are aiming for. You don't want to have to fight against the base color, this will lead to a thicker oil layer, & that is just trouble. Start with the body color; I chose a well loved half inch once-was-flat. Touch just the tip of the brush in the oil color, work it in the brush on the pallet paper so that it is even on the brush, & then sort of scrub it onto the horse. You don't really stroke with oils, that just leads to streaky color as a result. You use the tip of the bristles, this is what frays out my brushes so splendidly. Work in sections so you always have a hand hold: start with the head, neck/chest (or combine those three), shoulders, forelegs, belly/groin/inner thighs/butt, barrel, hindquarters, & finally back legs. The tail is usually my last handle, but with Rastus's calm tail I have to use the legs, so they will be painted later. A note on the glove: my hand gets sweaty as I work, which can make the base sticky, & that with all the handling can wear down the tooth of the base, so I wear a glove to protect the horse. We're back to not following the recipe with Rastus: Usually I base whatever section I'm working on, highlight, shade, & move to the next section, so each sections is pretty much finished once I move to the next, but blond is a special case. I bodied the whole horse, then went back to highlight with the white mix. & again, I usually highlight all the high points, but with blond I did only his belly/groin/inner thighs/butt, lower barrel, flank, back of thighs, behind the elbow, chest, high points of the neck, muzzle, eyes, & high points of the face - excluding the cheeks. This was done with the same method of kind of stippling the paint on with the brush tip, using the two brushes below. When you add highlight or shading, you are basically mixing paint ON the horse, which was a revelation that really did help my painting skills. You add the most (which is not much really) to where the color is brightest, & then feather it into the body color, in essence mixing the color more & more until it is indeterminable where one ends & the other begins. This is a skill, but trust me, you can learn it! After adding the highlight, I added the shading in increments; building it up in strength starting with the gold mix & the same one inch flat that I used for the highlight (cleaned, of course!). Breaking the rules with shading the same as highlighting, I added the shading mostly like a 'blanket' over the top, covering his topline, down his hips, barrel, shoulder, & crest, & catching some of the low points of his neck. On his face I did down his nose- stopping just short of his muzzle, his cheeks, & lightly catching the low points, but avoiding his eyes. Being pangare or mealy, the muzzle & eyes will be light. The shading was blended with the same stippling technique. After a couple go-overs with the gold, I took it up (or down?) a notch & added some red brown to the boldest colored areas. Even with the flash it's hard to see much difference between these two pictures, but trust me, in real life, there was. Also keep in mind that I will be building up dapples over this, so I don't want the base for the dapples too dark. Last thing I did was add black to the thin skinned areas. Same technique used here, only smaller. I blended it in pretty well so that it is pretty much grey. Next layer I do will bring the darkest areas up to black. If you look at a pangare, the thin skinned areas fade out to grey pretty far, so this was what I aimed for as it is hard to fade to grey with a second coat. Last of all, here is a group photo of what brushes I used: Sorry for the somewhat vague IDs here... I am not really up on my brush species. Also I tend to scrub off the printing on the clear-handled ones because if you hit that on the horse you get an instant & unfixable blue streak on your work! I can tell you that I mostly use synthetic bristles, but natural (sable?) brushes do make an appearance from time to time (that dark half inch flat). Now for a moment on cleaning brushes. I don't use turpentine, it is nasty stuff & if any is left in your brush it will screw up your next painting session. I don't even use brush soap. What I do use? Dish soap & warm water under the tap! Works just fine! I have also used saddle soap which works just as well. If you're tired after painting & want to cheat, put your brushes in the freezer, that'll buy you some time. & in the event you accidentally fossilize a brush, get some cheap canola oil from the grocery, put a little in a jam jar, & soak the bristles of your brush for a few hours or a day & wash out as usual (wash it well though as any left up in the brush can thin out your paint while you're working). Now for the finale, a couple slightly better pictures of Rastus. :) Chillin' in the China cupboard! TIP: I will sometimes carefully put a drying horse under a CLEAN plastic bag to help keep any dust off. As of today, his shading is dry, but his highlight is not. In a day or two I will be able to give him a layer of finish & continue working on him!
Until then, happy NaMoPaiMo all! Well, we've come to the end of day two of NaMoPaiMo, & Rastus is right on schedule! I am tired & cross eyed, so tomorrow I plan to post the in-depth narrative of his first layer of oils. In the meantime, here is his progress! His body, head & neck are completely oiled; body, highlight, & shading. His legs are still bare base coat & will have to catch up later... I have to have SOME sort of handle as I paint! ;) I had a heck of a time getting a pic that showed true color, but this one is pretty close. The flash showed a bit more depth, but a little too much contrast. You can really see the Pearl-Ex at work on his shoulder, shining in the flash. I'll get better pictures tomorrow in the daylight.
Happy painting everyone!! ![]() Annnnddd they're off!! NaMoPaiMo started today, & I dare say, all over the world model horse artists were busy at work! I had primered my Rastus yesterday to have him all set to go today for some basing! Since I plan to record his progress on here, I thought I would take the opportunity to show a little of how I paint. Now, since Rastus is going to be that typical pangare blond of your everyday Haflinger, he kind of deviates from my normal painting 'recipe', but he'll show how I paint a dappled blond at least. As I said, I sprayed him in primer, my brand of choice being Rust-Oleum Painters Touch flat white primer which I get at my local Hometown hardware store in Wooster. Even though it's winter, as long as the horse & the can are both house temperature, & it is not ridiculously cold, you can still primer & finish in the cold months. I have sprayed in upper & mid teens & had success. Shake the can while still inside. Shake it for two to twelve minutes! The longer time for new cans or cans that have sat for a while. Make sure the ball is rattling freely, & shake the can in all angles, including upside down (with lid on). Once adequately shaken, step outside & start the can, spraying out the first few seconds of primer/finish; this is to spray out what is in the nozzle/spout that would not shake up well. Then come in, grab the horse, step out & spray what you need & come in. Put the horse somewhere you don't have to smell it (a spare room or garage, crack a window if needed) so it can dry, & then step out to clear the nozzle by turning the can upside down & spraying until only gas comes out. This last part does not apply to the Rust-Oleum since they are an any-angle spray can & will work upside down as well. As a note; obviously, don't spray in snow or rain/drizzle as it will simulate fish-eyeing, & don't spray in great wind as it will swirl & more likely hit you than the horse. Always work in open air, & a respirator is advised. (Do not use a dust mask though: it will catch the fumes under it.) Can you see why I write CLEAR on the cap of the finish? Could we make these two cans any more similar?? As you can see in the pic above, there is matte finish of the same brand; for some reason after priming Rastus, two mysterious bright blue, sandy textured spots popped up on his tail; it reminded me of verdigris. The only thing I can think of to explain it is that there was some sort of reaction with the aluminum armature mesh I used to sculpt his tail, since where one spot appeared there was some mesh pretty close to the surface. I have no idea why it did this, I've never had it occur before, & it can't be the aluminum since his shoes are aluminum too & no problems there. Ah well, who knows! But my initial attempt to remedy the problem when it popped up again after scraping it off & primering over it once more was to add a layer of Rust-Oleum matte finish & then another layer of primer. It helped, but didn't stop it. I wound up putting some more epoxy over it. Problem solved. ...I hope! This is the stage that Mom calls 'Ghost horse'! After that, he was ready for the base coat! That was his first official NaMoPaiMo progress done today. If it isn't apparent yet, I paint mostly in oils, but oils are not the soul medium when you paint in oils! For starters, the first step is a base coat of acrylic. In every color I paint, I mix up bulk batches & constantly have them on hand, so I will not have any pictures of what goes into mixing any of the paint I'll be using on Rastus. My buckskin/palomino/blond/dun base is Americana 'Camel' color acrylic, with a dash of Liquitex clear gesso for tooth (not too much though, or the finished piece will look 'sandy' in texture when finished), & thinned with water to a consistency that just covers the side of the paint container without beading up. Tip: look for condiment containers at your dollar store, they are basically the same as paint containers but for a fraction of the price! I do not have an airbrush, so I do everything by hand. With a half inch synthetic flat my choice weapon for this battle, I start painting the base on in numerous layers, starting at his head, & going as far back as I can while still leaving myself a 'handle' bare of paint. (Eventually I will invert the process to catch the back legs.) Paint a layer, wait a smidge, paint another layer, wait a smidge, repeat, repeat, repeat, take a break for it to dry a bit, then come back & repeat, repeat, repeat... Always changing the directions of the brushstrokes with every layer to keep from building up ridges. Also, never apply more paint at once than you can brush out before it dries; the goal is many thin layers to avoid any brushstrokes. The base coat is finished when there are NO thin spots left. Trust me, if you leave a thin area, you will see it in the finished piece. I'm not precisely sure how many layers this was... 5-7 I think. So, still pretty thin & streaky. I have gotten into the habit of spraying a layer of finish over the completed base coat on some horses; this ensures that if some of the base gets worn off as I handle the horse, it does not leave me with an annoying hole of color to fill; it's not impossible, but it is a headache I wish to avoid. I use three different finishes in day to day use, today's choice was Krylon Crystal Clear flat, again from the hardware store, so it looks a bit different from what you find in the art aisle. ...I've never looked, it's probably cheaper too! After that dries, I then put down another two to four layers of base over the finish since, depending on which finish I use, it will either suck up the oils & make it hard to blend, or it will be too slick for the oils to hold onto &, make it hard to blend. This one falls more towards too slick. The Rust-Oleum is definitely slick, & Testors Dull Coat is the one that will suck it up like a sponge. With those last few base layers, the horse is completely based & ready to start with the oils once dried. I probably could have started oiling him today, but it's just as well to let him dry out well overnight. Tomorrow I will start his transformation from flat yellow-tan, to Haffy blond! Stay tuned! Base coat complete & ready for oils! Be sure to check out the latest about NaMoPaiMo here.
![]() Hey all! NaMoPaiMo sign up has officially started! You can participate on your own of course, but it turns out that signing up (which is free, btw) offers a chance at some potential goodies if you finish your pony within time. Read al the details on Jennifer's blog here & here. I just sent in my entry; Rastus is ready to roll! Join in the fun & color an equine for Feb! :) Rastus is all set & awaiting some primer!
Hello all! Well, I am failing miserably in keeping up with this blog. Nothing that surprises me too much actually. I don't particularly enjoy doing computer work; it takes me a ridiculous amount of time to do this kind of stuff, & then at the end of the day I have nothing physically in front of me to see that I have accomplished something with the time spent. I do have some exciting posts to put up, but they have been WIPs for a very long time as I pick at them here & there. (Also need to catch up on previous posts as well! eap!) But in the meantime I wanted to spread the word on a fast approaching model horse challenge! As many folks do, I enjoy reading Jennifer Buxton's Braymere Custom Saddlery blog, though I am not as devoted a reader as some (I just slips my poor little easily-distracted mind, to be honest!). But I popped over for some catching up a couple weeks ago only to find that she has a challenge brewing! It started mostly for herself, but she extended it to anyone who would like to participate with her: The National Model Painting Month! Please do read all about it on her blog here & here! NaMoPaiMo logo designed by Margaret Balch & used with permission. The name of the game is to start with a blank horse (prepped & primed is permitted) on the 1st of February 2017 & have a completely finished horse on the 28th of the same month. Now, unfortunately the majority of the chit-chatting is going to be on the NaMoPaiMo face book page, & I do not have, nor intend to get, FB, so my outlet is going to be on here. I perpetually have WIPs of various kinds hanging around, but the challenge of painting a model in the span of a single month (the shortest month) sounds like fun; I've never specifically attempted a first-day-to-last-day-one-month-pony. ;) The victim on my mind is a WIP Rastus, Yes, he's a little grubby, lol. He's been through a lot of handling! He is en rout to being a Halflinger all turned out for show. but there will probably be others, CMs that are hanging around in various stages of prepped. If based horses were included I would have a whole herd all set to go! So by George, join in on the challenge! Whether you are an old pro who thinks it sounds like fun, or a newbie who would like to try their hand, grab a pony & some paint & have a good time!
I just learned of the passing of a mainstay in the Ohio live showing community; Mary Sue Barnum. She passed away May 4th 2016 at age 62 after a battle with acute myeloid leukemia for less than a year. Her death has sadly gone largely unknown in the model world. I first met Mary Sue in 2010 at the first New Years Bash Live, she was one of the very first of the Ohio live show community that I met. She was a pistol! Rough around the edges but with a heart of gold. You gotta' know she was tough if she got mad & yelled at Breyer for those cheap plastic discs for Huck, & they sent her a box full of them free! She loved to raise & show Longhair Dachshunds, hated winter, & had fine taste in model horses with a showstring to drool over. She LOVED my '09 OS 'Joe' & encouraged me to get my first OS cast ...with many good words for Resins By Randy! She genuinely loved my work right from the start & was one of the first to buy a Sundara AR, though I don't think she had time to paint him. She also snapped up a CM repaint Wintersong who joined her showstring. She was a pastel model horse artist & she let me ask numerous questions about her work & techniques; I give her the credit for my learning to properly spray-finish a model. She always let me pick up & look at ANY of her show string, actually would get 'mad' at me for always asking if I could pick this one or that one up! & I always got a hug from her before we went home. ...I am going to miss her more than I can say. Rest in peace Mary Sue, live showing just won't be the same with out you around. http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/dispatch/obituary.aspx?pid=179908754 I am not much of a picture taker, but here are a few shots of some of her showstring as well as a couple candid pics of Mary Sue herself. If you have a memory of Mary Sue, feel free to leave a comment. Hey All! Well I had a great weekend at (usually) the only live show that I make in a year, the New Years Bash Live in Ashland Ohio, 3/5/16. I had orders from Deb Buckler to take LOTS of pictures to share, so I made an effort to get more than my usual five pictures. So here you go! What a day! There was never a break! Even over lunch I didn't have time, not even for lunch! Had to buy, tear, & fill out tickets for myself, my proxy, & a friend, & then fix a CMs eye for a friend. I love to show but boy is it ever go go go! I was up 'til 1:30 working on last minute things, then up at 4:30 finishing up one horse (who won his class btw!), getting ready to go, & confusing my real life horses by doing morning chores at the crack of dawn. Then out the door late at 6:30, get to the hall at 7:15, find my table, haul in, unpack, start showing! The show started at 8 & wasn't over 'til 7:00. But it was a blast! I got to sit between my best friends Kati & Angel, so that made it all the better! On the showing end of things, wow, tough show!!! I didn't do as well as I have in years past, especially in OF! That's ok though! I still had a great time! LOTS of drop dead GORGEOUS horses! Zowie! I am ever so pleased with several of my own horses wins; Aggie, Baskerville, Honey (101 Lbs. Of Fun), Wing (Wingardium Leviosa), Wence (Wenceslaus I), & Raj's (Sundara)! Especially Aggie since she was just patched up from molding; chipped off or painted over the molding dirt, covered over the few exaco marks, & patched up the two cracked bobs! & Raj is still beating his 'sons'- his casts! & it was Baskerville, Wing, & Wence's first show. Honey's shown two or three times & always wins something. Kati has a whole herd of my work & they did well, with Salazar topping them all! His first show too; after winning the MEPSA Khemosabi Makeover contest by a landslide, I hand delivered him to his new mama at this show. He has a good show home now & will be going to NAN & BF this year! I proxy horses for my friend Jo out in MT. too; boy she's got some stunning horses! For the first time ever I didn't sell anything at this show, so that kinda bums me out. I did buy three SM bodies; a G2 Clyde, A G3 Belgian, & a G3 Standing Stock Mare, & traded for four trad & two classic bodies; two Hucks, a Cody, A Gem Twist, a Classic WP QH, & a yearling Mestino. Bought a new splash G2 SM, I like her! Got an OF Platinum Star, a Wyatt body, & a sulky in trade. I'm excited about the sulky since just got a Highflyer AR! He looks spiffy in harness with the new sulky! Platinum Star/SWF More Than A Pretty Face won me a second in the Paint class which blew me away! Super B-I-G huge class Paint was!!!! it was split into mares & stallions/geldings & they were still huge classes! Oh! & I am so excited!!!! I won a Babyflo in the raffle! I have never ever won at a raffle in all my 6 years of live showing! I have every intention of repainting her & KEEPING her! I am thinking brindle, I've been wanting to try brindle. My CM Desatado for the raffle was well received, several of my friends really wanted him; even I put in a couple tickets for him! Though none of us got the Desatado I did get a hug from the complete stranger who DID win him! :) I hope he does well for her! Chunk, one of the show holders who I am friends with, text me that the raffle brought in about $800 for the Our Mims TB Retirement Refuge!! WOW!! I think that's it... Enjoy the pictures! As you can tell, I am more interested in the ARs & CMs than the OFs. I'm sure the perf was splendid, but I never managed to get more than one pic of that div. Cheers all! P.S. Here's a load more pictures from the Bash taken by PawPrints Saddlery https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.801464923330636.1073741872.167084630102005&type=3 Including apearences by Sal, Aggie, Gala, Bindi! ;) ~ C.K. "This is Orson Welles ladies and gentlemen, out of character, to assure you that The War of the Worlds has no further significance, than as the Holiday offering it was intended to be. The Mercury Theater’s own radio version of dressing up in a sheet and jumping out of a bush and saying “boo”. Starting now we couldn’t soap all your windows and steal all your garden gates, by tomorrow night so we did the best next thing; we annihilated the world before your very ears and utterly destroyed the CBS. You will be relieved I hope to learn that we didn’t mean it, and that both institutions are still open for business.
So goodbye everybody and remember please for the next day or so the terrible lesson you learned tonight; that grinning, glowing, globular invader in your living room is an inhabitant of the punkin’ patch and if your doorbell rings and nobody’s there, that was no Martian: It’s Halloween." Care to listen to the original broadcast of TWOTW from October 30th, 1938? Listen here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oWD9Q6klzco&feature=share Hi ho all! I am homebound for this BF weekend. No, there's nothing wrong, just lack of funds (it's that starving artist persona). So while I sit here, reading the texts from my friends who ARE in Lexington, I am starting two new ponies & working on the existing WIPs. I started two MM scale OSs yesterday. AND I took pictures along the way so I could write the first tutorial of my new blog! Are you proud of me? ;) It is hard to stop & take pictures! Disclaimer (don't be scared!): This is a tutorial on how I make a MM. You may do it totally different! & that's ok! There are no rules to sculpting a model horse other than it must look like a horse & preferably hold up fairly well (as in playdough is probably not the best medium for sculpting a MM, though someone may find it works perfectly for them!). So never be afraid to experiment & forge your own path! You may break some exciting new ground! Even if it's only for your own sculpting, it will be worth it! OK! Here goes! Supplies are: * An Idea * Paper, I just used note book paper * A pencil with a good eraser * Wire, I'm not precisely certain of the gauge of this stuff, between 24 & 34. I've had it for years & bought it for something else actually (look for the small gauges in the jewelry isle at the craft store) * Wire cutters or scissors * A+B epoxy putty * Aves Fixit epoxy putty (or Aves Apoxy Sculpt) * Water * Something to sculpt with, your fingers are too big to smooth say, in between the legs! You could probably use a pencil or something. My favorite tool is the 'etching' tool from one of those craft store etch a picture thingies. I got one for Christmas one year, kept the tool & ditched the kit! * Carbide Scraper (from Rio Rondo. Money well spent, trust me! & get ALL of the tips!) * Sand paper, about 600 grit (look for the fine grits for automotive detailing) * Needle Files, especially a small round. A flat & half round would be a good idea also. (Note that I have no clue if these are their actual names! ;) ) * I may add more as I think of them! I decided to do an Abaco Barb; it is the rarest horse breed in the world with only one mare, Nunki, left. They are a really amazing old Spanish breed that has lived feral for over 200 years on Great Abaco Island in the Bahamas. Just to challenge myself, I decided to do a mare & a teeny filly to go with her. I've never done a MM foal before! I'm looking foreword to it! Once I have my breed, pose, etc. & whatnot chosen, I sketch it out. I draw a 3" x 3" square, this is just to show the scale of what I'm working on in the in-progress pictures; I show a MM at the Fair in the Miniature class in art every year, & they have to be under 3" x 3"... I've got that part down easy with a MM! In the square I sketch the horse I have in my mind, they are never particularly GOOD sketches, but they don't need to be. All they need to be is as close as possible to the real life size & corresponding proportions of the model I am hoping to create. This is, in essence, my blue print, as I will use it to build the armature & begin the sculpting. Once the sketch is satisfactory, I grab the wire & guess a length to cut, estimating for longer than too short. You will need three lengths of wire, so guess your first strand & then cut two more. Then twist (or braid if you wish), the three strands together so you have a back length twist in the middle of your wires. You will want the 'non-twisted' wire ends to be about where your legs will start, not too far back & not too far forward. Then mix a smidgeon of A+B epoxy, which is the strongest, densest epoxy I have found so far, & cover the twist with it. Set it aside to cure. You can rub a little baking soda on the 'wet' epoxy so it wont stick & cure to whatever it's up against when you set it aside. I happened to set this one on the light bulb of the lamp over me while I moved onto making the filly; heat makes epoxy cure faster, while cold will slow it down. Being impatient, heat it got! (Be careful when you pick it up if you do this, it will be HOT! & don't forget it's up there either!) While that one was curing I started the filly. I did her in much the same way as the mare. About the only difference was that I did not use A+B on her. A+B is very hard, & with these little guys you need would have to hold onto the sculpt too hard to carve the A+B well- Squished OS! So for the skinny filly I did her entirely out of Fix it, which is the second densest epoxy I've found. If you do not wish to buy so many types of epoxies, just use Aves Apoxy Sculpt or your choice of epoxy, they're so small it won't make much difference in the end! (I would not recommend Apoxy Clay though, it is the softest & tends to 'chatter' with the scraper. They are too small for this to happen to.) After the epoxy had sufficiently 'cooked' on the lighbulb (I did burn the mare a bit I think! Oops!), I bent the armatures to match the poses of the sketches. Then it's just a matter of s l o w l y building up the horse shape with Fixit. They are so small, this has to be done in stages, very tiny stages, letting it cure in between. Here is how far I have gotten on them. & that brings their story up to the present. I will keep you updated on them as I move along! If anyone has any questions, please feel free to comment or contact me! Thanks for reading!
|
AuthorRamblings & tutorials of a model horse artist. NOTE
Just a 'public service notice' to any of my blog readers; Since there's not really any way to 'follow' a weebly blog, if you shoot me an email (sprucewoodfarmsstudio at gmail dot com) I will add you to my blog announcement list & will send you an email when a new post is added. :) Categories
All
Archives
June 2024
|