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Showing posts with label scale model. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scale model. Show all posts

Tuesday, 26 March 2013

Scale Model Making

As you may have gathered from previous posts, I recently completed a scale model making short course at Central Saint Martins.
It was really good; the class size was small so we got a lot of attention from the tutor (who is the author of the book I mention way back here), I learnt a lot of new techniques, and one of the guys on the course brought in cakes his wife had made for us! 

The best thing I made was this brick wall.
It's made from Kapa-line foamboard. I've tried a few different methods of making bricks before (here, here and here) but this is by far the easiest and most effective.

As it's foam you can just push into with a pencil and make marks. I also used a wire brush to texture the surface.

On the other side we made an interior wall including door and window frames.
I haven't finished wallpapering it yet, but you get the idea.
This was all made with PVC sheets, another material I'd never used before.

We also had a go at making figures and trees (both unfinished, obvs).
The figure is made of Sculpey around a wire armature.
The tree is made from wire mesh, another kind of foam, and eggshells!

And then there's these chairs that I love.
The larger one is made of the kapa-line foam and has been treated with resin to make it more durable.
I could paint it, but I quite like it the way it is.
The small chair is made of stencil card.
They're both stuck together with super glue (the cheap stuff from Poundland is just as good as the expensive stuff) and yes I almost stuck my fingers together/to my work many times.

It was a great course and I think my art work is really going to benefit from it.

Tuesday, 12 February 2013

Set Design Scale Model

One of the projects on my set design course was to re-design the set of the Graham Norton Show and make a scale model of our design.
My tutor said my idea was better than what the show has already.
Just sayin'.

I made the furniture out of Sculpey, and you can't really see in this photo but the legs of the table are triangles and are covered in glitter on the inside.
A lot of peoples designs involved glitter.

The guests enter from behind that orange triangle.
I love the gold shiny trim I used on the shapes, and the way it reflects light.

The right hand side of the set is the performance area.
I put the big gold shape in the middle to separate it from the sit-down area and added a fancy light fixture. I tried to make one myself but my tutor said we could just print out a picture of one.
That would not fly on my fine art course! Different worlds...

This was my first time using a scale ruler. With my miniature models I usually just wing it, but I might start using the ruler for my art miniatures as it is useful.