Wednesday 6 June 2012

Stop Motion Plesiosaurus puppet.

I decided to rescue this stop motion plesiosaur puppet, so bought it and now have it at home.

It is in need of quite a bit of TLC, but I will give it a go and hopefully animate it in the near future.

Here's a few pictures of the puppet, and the areas that need to be repaired...





stop motion plesiosaurus puppet

In the UK after the long journey from Los Angeles.



stop motion plesiosaurus puppet

It's missing an eye. I'll replace both of them.





stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet

Someone's had a go at making repairs in the past, but they've not held up well at all.




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet
A failed repair attempt from the past.




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet




stop motion plesiosaurus puppet

The foam rubber is still soft ... Just a shame it's cracking.



I'm hoping that liquid latex will do the job, but have never tried using it with foam latex.

I have some cotton wool and latex filling a couple of the splits at the moment.
I will let you know how it goes!














Sunday 3 June 2012

The King Kong "Spider Pit" Missing Creature

Hi again.

This time I decided to finish a creature that i'd started around 2 years ago .... The OCTOPUS CREATURE, from the infamous Kong '33, missing "spider pit."
What's great about creating this monster, is... No one (alive) has ever seen more than the odd tentacle in a production drawing, so you can let your imagination run wild!


spider+pit+stop+motion+mouth+3.JPG

Here's the wire armature that I built a few years back.














spider pit stop motion octopus insect
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A few weeks back, I found the armature in a box, and decided to do something with it. Here is how it looked (with the remains of the work I originally started still attached):





spider pit stop motion octopus insect
I decided to leave the original work attached to the armature and just work around/over it, and set to
work by wrapping each tentacle in wool:




spider pit stop motion octopus insect
Then I made a simple skin texture mold by pressing the "grip bumps" on some plier handles, into an oil based clay (simple, yet effective).




spider pit stop motion octopus insect
I then smeared three thin coats of latex over the texture mold (letting each layer dry before applying the next):
I also sculpted a few simple veins into the clay and they turned out ok.

NOTE: Always dust (with corn starch, talc or baking flour) the skin pieces before pulling them from the mold, becuse once latex touches latex it sticks and will ruin your casting.






spider pit stop motion octopus insect
Next, I dabbed latex onto the cotton tentacle and the underside of the latex skin, then stretched the molded skin around the tentacle until it held.






spider pit stop motion octopus insect
Starting to look like something now!





spider pit stop motion octopus insect

Now it was time to add the striking mouth at the rear; The claws are made from friendly plastic.





spider pit stop motion octopus insect

I started to form the mouth-claws with wool again (this method works quite well, it is very long winded, but worth it in the end!





spider pit stop motion octopus insect
Now it was time to add the webbing that will form the outer part of the mouth, so, again, it was a clay mold that was created.





spider pit stop motion octopus insect
I made the webbing a little thicker than the skin. I repeated this four times, but it would be a one shot deal if you made one big mold (I ran out of clay).



More soon!