Sorry guys, I hit the wall, I'm done. I'm not fixing it.
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Sorry guys, I hit the wall, I'm done. I'm not fixing it.
This is Distant Star 3 from 2010.
Sometimes, the projects don't work out as well as I would like, but I think it's important to show the failures as well as the successes. This is a fail, because I am both stubborn and lazy sometimes.
There are all kinds of things that read out-of-balance in the bird's design, from body shape to feather layering. I mean, really, is it a funky chicken or is it a raptor? Some feathers are layered "forward" and some "backward".
What was I thinking?
Why didn't I fix it when it was still in the pencil-drawing stage? WHYYYYYYY?
...Because I'm stubborn and lazy. I just couldn't be arsed to fix it. I've gotten most of that foolish mindset out of my system at this point, and I will scrap a drawing and start over to get it "right" - for Rachael-values of right - before I proceed to ink or color.
What I do like is the color balance and pattern arrangements, and the fun thing I tried with the super-simple background. While I wouldn't want to sell a piece like this because of the anatomical weirdness and personal dissatisfaction, I want to remember this pattern and color scheme, and the background thing. I will try again with another member of the series. Because I am stubborn.
Prismacolor pencils over watercolor.
Sometimes I have good ideas. Sometimes I have bad ones...
While I love my collection of natural dyed fabrics so far, I’ve found a major flaw in my plan to perhaps sew a baby quilt from them. The soft pinks and peaches turn out to resemble a subset of the human flesh tone range, a fact that is accentuated by tiling and haphazard piecing...
During daylight hours it’s charming and cute and hippie-ish. Having gazed upon it last night, stoned and under different lighting conditions, I now cannot un-see the human skin patchwork it resembles.
Question is... do I continue forward with my murder quilt or...?
I’ve been repeating “remember when we did things?” to A with an increasingly frantic tone these days... in attempt to stay calm and do things, have resumed playing with sugar.
Put butter, cornstarch, and a pinch of salt in this latest batch and poured out some at 120°C to try and pull taffy but it was far far too soft/sticky (but damn tasty). Will try again w/ a better temperature range to work from.
Have been interested in custom casting with sugar though none of the food safe mold making supplies I have can handle the required temp range. Tried powdered sugar “sand casting” and it turned out so-so. Would work better for larger/flatter items- the main flaws came from me knocking sugar into the mold cavity during the pour.
Brought it to 150°C and did a basic candy pour w/o additional flavors or coloring and they turned out insanely good- A says they taste like Werther's candies.
Had fun at Dr Sketchy’s this month but definitely wasn’t feeling it sketch wise... art spigot says “Off” right now apparently.
Had a work get-together at Upstairs Circus (a bar where you do diy projects) tonight. I picked a MUCH too ambitious project that was supposed to take 2-3 hours. Welp, I was there for the full 3 and this is how far I got.
It's supposed to be filled in with string!! 🤣
At least i know what I'll be working on all winter.
I went to the Make Fair this year, where I found the Enchanted Leaves booth. Staffed by very nice people, they were selling electroforming kits and sharing the details of the process.
While I should probably have bought a kit, I in fact sorta’ had a lot of the supplies at home from pervious projects (which I apparently have no existing posts for on any of my blogs...?). Years ago I tried electrolytic etching with a friend (it went so-so) and never tossed the supplies.
Picked up a bottle of graphite and tried to make some conductive paint. Turns out the first batch I made was no good (why didn’t I think to test it before trying to plate first?) Then mixed up a more concentrated batch and tried again. Still pretty resistive... but it started to do stuff.
What’d it do? It made a mess. The various electroforming posts/pages say if it’s salmon pink your current is too low and if it’s dark, it’s too high. Well, all I’ve got is a vague stripped power adapter that spits out something capped at 6V/1800mA... and my tests did start to plate, briefly, and then got super burnt out and the plating (later) easily flaked away...
So... probably need to get a more controllable power source... those run, what, ~$60 on Amazon and I don’t know if it’s worth it... was just a test project idea to try out a couple ideas. My copper sulfate solution is sooooo fucked up from years of crap/not cleaning that I doubt it’d even work well, even if I ran the right power through it...
Anyway, after seeing so many successful blog posts about electroforming, thought I’d contribute my little piece of failure to help frame it all.
It only looks good from this angle abs that’s saying something.