A lot of pictures on this site were hosted on Photobucket before they disabled photo embedding. If you'd like to see pictures for a particular post, please let me know, and I'll prioritize getting those images fixed next!

Friday, February 14, 2014

Fish Face

Happy Valentine's Day from the Gillman!

Work in progress super sculpey maquette

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

First Hag Mask Casting

I did a quick casting and painting of the Old Hag mask for use in the Beauty and the Beast production.  Future copies will be painted a little differently, but it's fun to see her with some color.  This one is only the front half, as that's all that will be needed with her costume.


It occurs to me the face could lend itself to all sorts of grumpy characters....

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Sculpting Tips (Fright Radio)

The new episode of Fright Radio comes out today, so below you'll find the transcript for my segment on sculpting tips.  This one centers around the primary clay options for haunters.  As with last time, I've tried to give a few links where I can.

Thoughts on Sculpting for a Haunt

Good evening.  I'm Mr. Chicken, and you're entering my Hall of Illusions.  

I was listening to the last two episodes while sculpting an old hag mask, and trying to figure out what to do another segment on for my return to the show, when suddenly I realized I was staring it in the face, quite literally. So pick up your sculpting tools and let’s talk about sculpture for haunting.

There’s a lot of information online about sculpture, so I want to focus on some ideas that you won’t hear as much.  Specifically, these are the sculpting tips I wish someone had told me when I started out.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Molding the Old Hag Mask

A Moldmaking Tutorial for Latex Masks

This isn't the only way to mold a sculpture for mask making, but it's what I did for the Old Hag posted earlier this month (sculpted in WED clay), and it works pretty well.

First a light, even coat of crystal clear (Krylon is the appropriate brand to use, but I had Rustoleum on hand and it worked fine).  This is to seal off the water content of the clay so it doesn't interfere with the plaster later.  Ooo, shiny!  Make sure to give it plenty of time to dry before proceeding.

Back inside.  I decided to mold this one laying down, so I propped the sculpture face up on a piece of bubble wrap (to protect the back and keep it from rolling), then put some bricks and blocks of wood to fill in most of the space before I build the clay wall.

I used EM-210 White Clay (which is a fairly dark grey, for whatever reason) to build the mold wall.