June 10, 2022

BreyerFest Best Customs Contest 2022

 

Giuseppe, the donkey nanny
BF Best Customs Contest Entry 2022


The making of Giuseppe (and a dozen friends)...


Started out by chopping apart a Breyer QH Yearling. 


Whittled it down to almost sticks. I had to remove so much plastic to get the chunky QH into a donkey's thinner frame. By chopping down the middle, I was able to make him narrower. By chopping in half the other way, I was able to lengthen the back and change the angle that the hindquarters attach to the body. 


Sculpted the head separate from the body and found I really liked that approach.


Bulking up and setting the head in place. 



Used painters tape and soda glue to make the armature for the mane and tail tuft. 
Very little of the original plastic shows through and none of the original sculpture is left.
It's all been carved or sanded down.


Took pictures at this stage, so I could see if there were areas needing taking. 


Droopy lip and floppy ears.


Pile of sheep. Lots of back and forth on sculpting these.
These are all original sculptures built from wire armatures. 


Countless hours later, the sheep have made it into primer. 
(insert counting sheep joke here, I have no energy left)


The lambs are also all original sculptures. Here they are trying out the fit of their blanket.


And trying it on G.


Broke out the power tools (love me my power tools) and cut a piece of wood down to size. 
Primed it, painted it with latex paint, then painted it with acrylic craft paints (seen here).
The landscaping came later, sorry no pictures. I worked long and late down to the wire!

G with Sheep
the official ruler picture


Offside showing off the other little lambies.


 I made everything except the string cinch.
The halter was my International Tack Month project,
which I both started and completed about a month or two after IMTM. 
The group was super helpful to point me in the right direction so that I could learn
to skive leather, stitch mark it, and make a rolled throatlatch. 


None of the sheep or lambs have names yet. I am open to suggestions!