Comments: 16
RubyDarlingsluckyone [2013-05-02 11:37:50 +0000 UTC]
you are really talanted! did someone order thet sculpt or did you make it for fun? C:
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clayjase69 [2013-04-19 06:57:09 +0000 UTC]
Brilliant work
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artenauta [2013-04-18 14:15:39 +0000 UTC]
Awesome work, interesting photo... I'd like to do something like this...
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blackpanda In reply to Kulot [2013-04-18 13:54:04 +0000 UTC]
steel armature, polystyrene, varaform, rubber milk, ...
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Kulot In reply to blackpanda [2013-04-18 13:58:07 +0000 UTC]
im not familiar with rubber milk, i want to do a dinosaur made or polystyrene but i dont know what to do when it comes to skin texture
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blackpanda In reply to Kulot [2013-04-18 14:28:30 +0000 UTC]
well, there are different ways of doing skin texture...in this particular case I sculpted some skin in clay, made a plaster mold and pured the rubber milk into the mold to get a flexible skin that I glued on the coated polystyrene body.
Good luck with your dinosaur!
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blackpanda In reply to Kulot [2013-04-18 20:01:37 +0000 UTC]
It's fine!
Unfortunately it's not made for being used outside. You'll need to cover it with some kind of epoxy or resin or whatever...but to be honest, I don't think using rubbermilk is the best way of doing the skin texture for something that size, it was just the cheapest and fastest way when I did it back then, because I didn't have access to resin/fiber glass/etc. "Normally" when you make something that is used outside you'll need to make a negative (silicon) mold of your sculpted/carved piece and then use fiberglass/epoxy/resin/polyester to make a nice (hollow) positive that resists all kinds of weather.
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Kulot In reply to blackpanda [2013-04-19 09:04:51 +0000 UTC]
Thank you very much i will
Keep that in mind have to ask abu yoseff as to how can we preserve the texture when doing fiber
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