Blitz AFS Fireman Bust Sculpt ,1-10 scale
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Trouble with some 3d stuff Neil is it lacks character and some of the sculpts appear stilted and robot like.Its great for weapons and equipment but many like the traditional wet sculpting.There is a place for all i feel,Dont give up as the head you sculpted is particularly good and there are many who shy away from sculpting but at times i find it quite theraputic and relaxing but frustrating as well.Its a case of if you look at something and its not quite right then go again.At least with sculpting you dont end up losing lots like with an expensive kit at 50 pounds plus.Its nice to see other sculptors here as i have very little contact with others and most seem not that interested in what we do.
Chin up Carruthers.
RichComment
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I’m calling him done.
I’ve been absent this week because I didn’t see the value in blogging any more of my failures.
I struggled a bit with the buttons but I got there in the end. It would have been quicker to just make them all individually. but I have at least invented a new use for UV curing glue!
The respirator hooks were a challenge until I hit on the idea of filling in around some bent copper wire.
I wasn’t happy with the oilcloth veil/hood, so I did it again, and again-I had 3 attempts before I was happy. I tried another Duro version and a really terrible silver foil version.
I couldn’t use the Bees Putty because I knew the 3D-printed helmet would melt in the oven, so I decided to make a Milliput mould of the inside of the helmet then a car body filler cast of that, which I then used to model the veil in-situ.
He looked like he'd just stepped out of 'Fiddler on the Roof', but it did the job. I wasn’t happy with the end result, though. I just couldn’t get the drapery right AND the texture. So I tried a different approach by using the crumpled greaseproof paper I was using to impress the texture.
I need it to stay rigid because I want to mould it, so I hardened it with two coats of this (other wet-rot treatments are available, I’m sure)
I think it’s the same as clear dope for model aeroplanes, actually.
I thickened the whole thing up (for moulding) from the inside with my new best friend, the UV fly-tying resin glue, and then added a second layer of crumpled greaseproof paper for the texture of the inside surface, which also got ‘The Tetrion Treatment’.
I nearly forgot the screw on the top of the helmet, for which I used half a lead fishing line weight.
Anyway, here he is, my first ever bust, all ready for rubber (Steady, the Buffs!)
The plinth, by the way, is 3D-printed in PLA on an FDM machine at extra fine resolution (0.06mm build layer).
It’s had a coat of Halford’s High-Build Primer-Filler to fill in the layering, a rub down with 600 wet & Dry and another coat of primer filler. It just needs a coat of gloss before I mould it.
Thanks for looking
NeilComment
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Thanks alot Jim. I used it once to harden the edges of a contour model made of layers of card. It made it like a piece of plywood so that I could sand it square.
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Thank you Andrew
Cheers John, much appreciated, coming from the man who did Yoda!Comment

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