Saturday, August 6, 2011

Swingin' a chain, swingin' a chain...




Hey look! His monocle has a chain! Whee!

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Good things come to those who... procrastinate...

Since I've been terribly slow working on the little guy, and since I don't see my ambition to finish him raising in the near future, here is the next Sack Boy I'm working on.



As you can see, this one is a touch smaller.

I'm likely going to put this little guy on hold for a short while, as I want to make a sculpture of the character from Journey, which should present me with some interesting challenges.

Also I have a more artistic piece in mind that I need to get cracking on. I have until mid August to finish it.

Friday, June 24, 2011

The Power of Sack Boy

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Funny, isn't it, what one little Sack Boy can do?

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Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Reginald P. Sackerton

Here's a quick step-by-step of the creation of my sackboy sculpture.

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Here's my SackBoy, Reginald P. Sackerton. I love this pose, so I used it for my sculpt.

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I started with a simple wire skeleton to build on, starting with the feet, legs, spine, and head.

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I then added a wire for the arms. I worked with a PS3 controller to make sure my scale was accurate. Turns out that SackBoy is officially 8cm tall, and that's what I ended up with by just going by eye.

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Added some meat to his bones. Legs are in place as well as most of the torso. I also filled in the ring of wire for his head with a disk of material to build on.

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Here everything for the base SackBoy is in place, fingers and all. Yes, I went so far as to add all 5 of his little fingers on each hand. I also added the tongue and the sleeves for the coat.

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Adding the hat. I made a frame of wire for the crown and stuck it to his head and bulked it in with Spackle. I then added wires as guidelines for the shape of the brim.

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Covered the Spackle with clay and added a ring of wire around the brim as a guide.

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Skipped a few steps between pictures here, in case you didn't notice. Added the bulk of the coat, the scarf, the teeth, all the hair, the monocle, the decorations, and a partridge in a pear tree. This last bit is tough to see, but trust me, it's there. Honest.

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Added the base coat of black spray paint, added white for the teeth and clock face, and painted his face. At this point you can also see the chain I added to the monocle as detail, but it kept falling off so I removed it. Once I find a suitable one, I plan to add a little REAL chain and stick it on there.

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Did you know that you can rotate your Sack Thing by hovering the Sticker Tool over it until the camera zooms in and pressing R1 and L1? I didn't. After learning that trick I realized just how wrong I had sculpted the hair (Madison Hair from the Heavy Rain pack) so I re-sculpted it.

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After that I finished the paint job. I started with the hair, using a dark desaturated brown as a base and adding white for the highlights. I then did the coat, using very thin paint in several layers to get the pattern to look right.

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Next I did the pants, hat, and scarf, again using many layers of thin paint. The feather I did last of all, but it's only really visible in this pic =_=;

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Right after I did the hat, I added the sticker on top, which is the "Wheel Sketch" sticker and the only sticker on this guy.

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Afterwards came the rest of the decorations. Tiny roman numerals are tricky, but all you need is a good brush, some thin paint, and a very steady hand.



And of course, because I knew I would, I left out a couple tiny details before I did my nice pretty photoshoot. Here's what I missed before: The "LBP" and little crest on the clock.

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And that's that! If you have any questions about this little dude, feel free to ask!

Oh, and Reginald will now be a regular on the video podcast I co-host: PodCast, which is, of course LBP related!

MATERIALS USED

Lots of people have been asking what I used to make this guy, so I thought I'd just list it off here!

Wire Skeleton: Fibre Craft Painted Wire I got from the hobby section of Wal*Mart
Body, details, and most everything else: Aves Apoxie Sculpt I got from Amazon
Hat Crown Filler: DAP Fast 'N Final Lightweight Spackling I got at Meijer
Paint: Various colors of FolkArt and Apple Barrel acrylics I got from Wal*Mart and Hobby Lobby. The black spray paint was the cheapest can of matte black I could find.
Brushes: A few cheap brushes for the bulk of the work, but for the fine details I used a Winsor & Newton Series 7 size 0 Miniature painting brush. This is the best paintbrush I have ever used. I bought it from Dick Blick's website