Friday, November 18, 2016

Still here



So, I am still making things; however, I have not done much with the big E. Instead I had elements of a Halloween costume to create, and right now I am working on holiday gifts, so I will post the making of those after they have gone out. If I get any work done on the Enterprise you will see it here as well. I am working to document the creation of something completely different than a model, something you may not even expect. It is a gift, so after the holidays.

I do have some pics to post from my Halloween work, as well as some explanation of how I went about making these things. So for Halloween the wife and I went as Death and his granddaughter Susan from Terry Pratchett’s Disk World books, specifically we had in mind The Hogfather as we were reading a passage at Dead Writers’ Night. Death, in this world, is the standard large skeletal guy we all know and love. He carries with him a sword and a scythe and often has an hourglass. His eyes glow blue. With him, most often, is Death of Rats, the grim reaper for the souls of rats.  In the TV version of The Hogfather, Death, Susan and Death of Rats all hold their cloaks closed with the same basic omega pin. So, for this I needed a skull mask with glowing blue eyes, a sword, three omega pins, a pair of hourglasses that would not break easily, and, well, a Death of Rats.

Death, Death of Rats (on the piano) and Susan


Death of Rats turned out to be a pretty easy task. At Jo-Anne’s I found a 1:1 plastic rat skeleton. The skull is nowhere accurate (ears, really?) but it would do. Using a heat gun I softened the plastic in some key areas to take him from being four footed to two. Then using a combination of the heat gun and careful cutting I re-positioned the arms and the head. Finally, I cut off the ears and sanded that area smooth. The skull was cast in 2 pieces and came apart with just a screw, so I added a blue LED with fiber optics to give the eyes a pin prick of blue light. I ran the wire down his back and secured the battery and switch from an electric tea light to his legs. The battery carries just enough juice to light the blue LED. Finally I shaped a blade scythe blade and attached it to a piece of thin bamboo I had lying around. Voila, a naked Death of Rats. I patterned and Coowee sewed a robe and cloak for him. He was basically a one day build.

The original

Standing tall
With the robe, no cloak
Cloak and pin in place

The next thing I did was make the omega pins. Using stills from the film I estimated a length for the pin. I then found an image of a recreation offered at a website. I used word to set the length of the image to the length I wanted for each pin (6”, 5” and 1”). I then printed them out. I used these as patterns to cut out the shapes in sculpay. After they baked all I needed was some paint to have three omega pins.
The finished pins

The hourglasses were an interesting process. They are made of plastic wine classes, plastic plates, sand, and dowels. The idea was to make large hourglasses that would not be easy to break. In the end I am not sure if these are sturdier than the glass ones we have, but they did the job. The shorter one used the disposable plastic wine glasses, and was a bit easier. The seam between the two was already flush, so it was just adjusting the hole between them to let the sand slowly fall through. With the big one I used acrylic wine glasses where I had to cut off the bottom. Getting the two flush was a problem, one I never really fixed as there is a slight lean. With both I got the hole big enough, then glued the pair together. I filled one side with sand, then glued on the plates. After that died I turned them over and glued on the other plate. The dowels were cut to length and I spaced them out and both glued and screwed them in place. Painting was interesting, I had the entire glass part masked to do a coat of primer, then black spray paint. They work pretty well, but once the sand gets to a certain level it will often bind up in the hole. The sand is sharp and jagged, so it catches on itself. Still, they look the part.
The small one I made first
The big one.

The mask was a longer process. Once I found a mask to use it required a lot of work. The mask was a silver skull, and had fangs and an angry expression. Well that would not do, so I ground down the fangs and opened up the eyes to make a better looking expression. I needed some depth to the eyes to allow for the scrim and the lights, so I used small paper cups to get the basic shape, then glued in thin sheets of polystyrene. I used the epoxy putty to sculpt the eye sockets back into shape and smooth over the transitions. I also used a little to reshape the teeth a touch. The lights are stitched into the scrim I laid over the open sockets after the mask was painted. The circuit was a pretty simple one with a 9 volt, a resister and a switch. I then added scrim around the mask to hide my.
The mask of Death
. . . with lights!
behind the mask

The sword was the last thing I made (well, save cleaning up and painting the old scythe. Yes, that is a real one with a coat of silver paint). I found a basic evil looking sword at one o the local Halloween shops, along with some small skulls. From there it was simply a process of cutting the skulls to fit onto the different parts of the sword’s handle and using epoxy putty to fix them on. I also used the epoxy to create the spike at the top of the pommel. Like everything here, a coat of paint and we were good. Just in case you are wondering, I did not use the airbrush. These were all given base coats with spray paint and detailed with acrylic.
The original

the skulls

Done but for the paiint

from the side


All finished

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