@Rends with Tongue I use FIMO and did experiment a little with wireframe and it didn't work out for me and I only do this for the Guild Wars contests, maybe I'm just not experienced enough to sculpt from a base I need it in my hands
Big pieces stick together really well but when I put in little details like the claws and the spikes on her armor bake first then glue them.
You can bake the clay multiple times but note that glued parts come off due to the heat.
The feathers are real easy as I only use my hands and a kitchen knife, I'll post a progress picture in a minute.
Can't wait to take a peek in your progress gallery.
@UnOrthOdOx Hope it does the trick, decapitation is serious business!
You got me curious what their role next year wil be.
Last edited by Odinius; Oct 03, 2011 at 02:29 PM // 14:29..
Reason: added picture
Odinius@ That's fascinating! And you glue each feather in place individually? Incredible. I'm far from an expert when it comes to clay, having only done 2-3 previous projects in the last 2 years myself. Were you by any chance a winner in the '10 or '09 Halloween contest that created the Mad King Thorn/Trick-or-Treating Gwen clay scene? Hate to keep gushing over this stuff but I'm easily mesmerized by polymer clay creations.
The feathers are flat upon a flat layer so those were added pre-bake.
And yes that one was mine too
And ask, praise and better yet criticise all you want, that's excactly what this thread is for.
Note: If anyone saw my earlier question, I figured it out relatively soon after I posted it, but this is something I'm not familiar with.
This is what I'll be making, essentially. Please note 'A' (the long tube on the image) going up the length of the statue; this is a hollow shaft that will contain a plastic tube for directing the dry ice fog produced in the 'b' plastic container.
On to my point: Is it possible to make a light that I can thread up through the tube, to make light come out of the eyes? This was a last minute thought but I'm just not wrapping my head around how I would do it, or what I would use. I tried looking up LED circuits for a simple 9-volt, single LED light but it may involve slightly more than I have time for, which is fine considering it's not necessary -- however it'd be cool if I could get his eyes to emit light, or look as though they're glowing. The shaft is slightly thicker than 1 in. so there is plenty of room. The only image I have in my head is a bulb and wire threaded through a thin copper tube, and the wire and battery attached at the opposite end, to allow it to stay erect while within the shaft.
Everyone, please pm me if I make any mistakes, I try to read it all but there is sooooo much I might miss things
Quote:
Originally Posted by Minami
@Unorthodox: Those yard decos are totally wicked O_O I wouldn't mind our yard to look like that on Halloween
Haha you were the first person I thought of when I saw Unothodox's stuff, I remember you saying last year the kids love coming round to your house at Halloween
Quote:
Originally Posted by Odinius
Last years one stood on display for a month in the store where I bought the clay and is now collecting dust on top our bedroom closet.
Oh no, That's such a waste. You will have to get a display cabinet for them!
Last edited by Aeronwen; Oct 04, 2011 at 07:48 AM // 07:48..
Name: bebe
Art Form: along the lines of.. craft/cooking/ss-manipulation? can't decide.
Idea: halloweenie with pumpkins? (=
Progress Gallery: http://gwhw.wish-ful.net (if it doesn't work, means I haven't made it yet.. but will be there!)
Real Life Prizes: [_]
Official Contest: [_]
Workshop Awards: [XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX] < yes.. i want.. haha
Hopefully I can be supar active.. I haven't been so.. but perhaps this little contest will get me back in. =D
Last edited by bebe; Oct 04, 2011 at 03:38 AM // 03:38..
Guild: People for the Ethical Treatment of Quaggan [PETQ]
Profession: W/
Hello GWG!
This is my OFFICIAL FIRST POST here, despite having been fairly active on GW2G (not to mention playing GW).
It's a bit late in the game, but I am makin' a submission for the wordy portion of the contest. Literature seems too generous a word for fanfic :P
Name: Rapturous Sauerkraut
Art Form: Short story (5-10k wordcount)
Idea: An autobiography of (by?) Mad King Thorn's court jester, Chucol. Surprisingly enough, it's a tragic tale.
Progress Gallery: Alas! I'm not used to posting things I write. I'll keep my progress here, in spoilers, until I get something better (or until the contest is over and it's beside the point).
Prologue: The Crying Pumpkin Inn
A huddle of nervous men stood in a pumpkin patch, almost invisible in the cloudy night. An inn stood next to the patch. Bright, merry lights shone inside, offering warmth and safety to passersby on this most cold and dangerous of nights: the night of Hallow’s Eve. As the candles flickered and the fire was stoked, the men outside just shivered and murmured. They whispered old tales of supernatural fright, leaning close to the speakers to catch their words from the strong east wind. All the time they spoke, one at least was peering over at a prostrate form on the pumpkin patch’s fence. It looked to be a spindly man, thrown and broken against the fence. His heavy round head lolled against his chest, moving now and then in accordance with the wind. This was no victim of bandits nor sickly traveler, though. This was the Pumpkin-Man of legend, the tragic jester of Thorn’s Lunatic Court.
It was four minutes till midnight when the Pumpkin-Man’s head began to glow. All the men drew torches and flint from their cloaks, to better see the famous figure. As they approached, the vines of the Pumpkin-Man’s body began to stiffen and straighten; though the head still drooped, the body rose until it stood at the height of a man. When they were still a stone’s throw back, the men stopped and raised their torches. “Hail, phantom! We come to hear the song of the Mad King’s fall, and the tragedy of his jester Chucol.” An eerie orange light filled the Pumpkin-Man’s squash of a head; pointed eyes and a jagged mouth were illuminated in his rounded face. The men saw the mouth widen in an awful grin, as countless tears poured from the undead eyes. The Pumpkin-Man’s voice came forth from that grin, high and raspy like dead leaves against stone.
“Ah. My dear mortals. By the Mad King’s command, I must fulfill this wish, whether ye will it or no.”
Chapter 1: Chortles and Chuckles
Carnival Day dawned bright and hot on Lion’s Arch. The weather was perfect: a light sea-breeze blew the heat from the city and the sweat from the party-goers. I was one of them, dressed in a dandy suit of purple and orange, an apprentice jester’s suit. A crowd of hundreds pressed close around me, every one of them trying to get a better view of the legendary fool on the high, circular stage. The King’s Stage, as it was called in those days, was empty and bare save for a flamboyant old man, my master. He was as well-known for his wild fashion as for his miming, jests, and acrobatics. He wore his third-favorite outfit: A tight, frilly three-piece suit, with a checkered pattern of yellow and sparkling pink. His wild white hair shone like the diamonds on his cuffs and collar. The sun flashed off his sequins as he danced a jig and sang a song of love between dwarf and charr. That song is long-forgotten, I’m afraid to say; undeath does nothing for one’s powers of memory.
I do remember that the commoners and nobility alike howled with glee at the old man’s warbling bass and flying feet. They could hardly breath for laughing! Indeed, a crew of healers with earmuffs was scattered through the crowd, ready to carry the over-hysteric away for a healing Potion of Melancholy. They were busy, too, especially at the end of the Song of Ashstrike and Lovehorn. Ah! There you have the song’s name, at least. Perhaps I’ll remember the rest, if I stick my mind to it. Anyway, those who hadn’t collapsed in merriment were chanting the old man’s name as he took an exaggerated bow with a devilish grin: “Chortul! Chortul!” Such was his name. Didn’t you wonder why Krytans call a good joke a chortle? Such was his reputation.
As always, the song and jig were the end of Chortul’s act. He winked at the audience and threw his head back. He reached deep into his throat and took hold of something, and the crowd gasped as he pulled it out: a beautiful orange rose. Chortul laughed at their shock and threw the rose into the air. The stem burst into green flame and the petals exploded into a massive cloud of confetti. When the wind cleared the stage of confetti, only a cinder of the stem remained; as the audience began to relax and laugh, I pushed my way to the front. A hidden passage opened in the stage’s side, and one of Chortul’s long, worn fingers beckoned from the darkness within. Those few that could see the door and the disembodied finger shouted in surprise, but before they could move, I blew a raspberry at the dopes and slipped into the darkness.
“Well, well, m’boy, your opening act didn’t go off half as bad as it did in rehearsal. To be frank, I expected you to explode the drake again. Although, to be fair, your tidiness covered in beast-guts is funnier by far than the joke’s real punchline. Get me wine, won’t you? Oh! Could you see the Great Prick from where you stood? Was he laughing enough? Was he mad, or merely insane? What of his consort? Did she laugh for the jokes or to keep Thorn company? By Lyssa’s lying lips, you know as well as I do we’re dead if she says a bad word of us. We ought to get that Elonian hag burnt. You’d think it easy enough, from the others.” He was always like that: on-stage, the very definition of deliberation and ease; backstage, manic, unpredictable, and a bit dangerous. I smiled weakly, overwhelmed at the rush of thought. “I’ll get you water, not wine, master. Gods know you had enough this morning.” He snorted as I began to walk away. “Don’t dodge questions with insults, child. How’d King Prick like the show?” Though I had turned away, I could almost feel his fearful look on my back. I couldn’t bear it. “Master, I believe that he thought that, well, the King of Kryta, that is, the Prick, as you call him, was of the opinion that your show, well, I think thoughtfully that I ought to think that his thinkful thoughts of your show were rather like a thought that your worried thoughts thought he might have thought.”
Chortul chortled miserably as he sank against the tunnel wall. We were in a sort of sub-stage cellar, you see. There were a few dressing-rooms, several storage rooms, a pantry, and a long tunnel that linked them all. Lyssan Doors (that is to say, a sort of door that is only visible if you’ve had a very particular charm of disdelusion placed upon you) led into this basement from each direction; we were in the main tunnel, which joined all the rooms and entrance tunnels together. Architecture hardly matters, though. I speak of my beloved old master, as he slumped in cheery despair against the masonry. When he had laughed his fear away, he spoke. “Dear apprentice, you complicate a simple bit of bad news as though you tell me Nightfall’s nigh. Get me that water. We’ve got an aristocracy to entertain tonight, do we not? Besides, Thorn’s wrath at my out-joking him might not last. We’ll stay out of the capital until next Carnival, and pray to the Duality that news of our act doesn’t reach the monarch’s ears. Even then, there’s Vabbi. I heard that those idiotic, nomadic merchants have a keen appreciation for theater.”
I hurried away, eager to get the old man’s spirits to a proper state for the next week of Carnival. That night alone, we’d been paid to attend a dozen different parties thrown by the bloated nobility. All were excited by the prospect of revelry and mischief, especially in the face of peasant revolts and war with Istan. Though they were loath to admit it, the aristocrats were running short on loyal troops to keep the rabble down, and shorter still on gold to keep the disloyal troops content. Hopeless though they were, the merrymaking leeches of Kryta were Chortul’s patrons, and he was mine. So we sold them happiness at an exorbitant fee, even as serfs withheld taxes and butchered the collectors. Peasants made stew of bark and fingernails while we tossed crème brûlée to the hounds. I speak high-mindedly now, but stifling my morals was easy enough while we rode the skirts of Kryta’s elite.
Chapter 2: A High Life Chapter 3: Provincialism Chapter 4: My Own Master Chapter 5: Pride Before A Fall Epilogue
Criticism is welcome. Really, extraordinarily welcome.
Real Life Prizes: [x] Official Contest: [x] (see Konig's note) Workshop Awards: [x] this means the long list of awards in the OP, right?
Please do read the spoilers' content, and post a note on it if you're willing.
Edit: A semi-polished prologue and chapter 1 are now in the spoilers. Help me!
Last edited by Rapturous Sauerkraut; Oct 04, 2011 at 07:40 AM // 07:40..
Name: Minami Art Form: Drawing Idea: "It's all about the presentation..." Progress Gallery:http://liviazita.deviantart.com/gallery/33009250 Real Life Prizes: [X] (tick this if you wish to compete for real-life prizes, if we have any - if you select this and we do have RL prizes, then you must be willing to provide your real address via email)
Official Contest: [X] (tick this if youre submitting your entry to the official contest at www.guildwars.com)
Workshop Awards: [X] (tick this if you want to compete for the workshop awards (you forfeit your chance to be a judge)
Fiber Optics is your friend. The science shop here sells it for $0.50 - $6.00 a meter for regular stuffs. Place a light source (a flashlight will work), run your fibers up to the eyes, and voila .. you have glowing eyes. You can change the colour by putting a piece of heat resistant plastic over the flashlight (or using a coloured light bulb in a lamp) ... or use a red laser pointer type thing for red eyes. It carries light a good 70 some odd metres or more & you can control the brightness by using a lower wattage light source. Also, because the fiber optic doesn't transmit as much heat as regular lighting sources, you can (if you so choose) use fabric or plastic to dim and distort your glowing effect.
@Unorthodox I hope you manage to save it all from the flood. I am a little in sympathy with your distressed neighbour, I would be very unhappy if one of neighbours had anything like it in their front gardens and I had to walk past it.
Minami, I think in past years people have entered and been judges but obviously simply not been judges on the categories they entered. With so many literature entries we may have to divide the effort anyway. Verene can say for sure.
@Unorthodox I hope you manage to save it all from the flood. I am a little in sympathy with your distressed neighbour, I would be very unhappy if one of neighbours had anything like it in their front gardens and I had to walk past it.
Yeah, I get it, which is why I wanted it up, for the pic and back down. The corpses have not stayed out at all. I normally only decorate for a few days.