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Let's see… I had to sand and sculpt over the arc reactor on the chest, cut the neck peg off and replace with a new one that fits GI Joe heads, cut down and resculpt the stems of the new hands, sculpt the massive beard and sculpt the collar (barely visible under the beard, unfortunately).
Not to mention the head-to-toe silver paint job with Crom knows how many coatings of black wash and brown drybrush. The paint job was actually kind of fun; I didn't have to do a lot of sanding or sealing. So it was all my imagination and a paintbrush.
"Hey sexy." |
Ol' Ivan doesn't fit a particular intellectual property… I just envision him as a hulking badass with a big gun. Maybe a steampunk Soviet soldier in power armor. In any case, the name comes from a concept version of Gordon Freeman from Half-Life. The resemblance is mostly in the big, bushy beard. I also had a character in Fallout 3 and New Vegas of the same name who was fond of power armor and big guns.
Ivan missed a career in pro wrestling |
Sadly, no literal space biking, which would be cool. Also, no shoulder pads! I know, sacrilege. But how the heck could he rotate his arms more than 5 degrees with them? Homeboy's got a big gun to lift, after all.
Who's scruffy-looking? |
My, what a big gun you have! |
Seems the photography works well enough that I can start getting other projects documented. I have a bad habit of scrapping them and going back to the drawing board. Got a few more on the shelf, and a lot more in production. More soon, I promise!
Nice work! I'm not very familiar with the custom figure scene; what material did you sculpt the beard from? Sugru? One of the Sculpeys?
ReplyDeleteGreen Stuff. Two clays mixed together that naturally cure into a plastic-like substance that has some give. Hard to sculpt in, though. But it beats Sculpey, which really only works on its own, since it requires high heat to cure (and would literally melt faces off!).
ReplyDeleteYeah, I was wondering about that. I've seen Sculpey II spot-cured by careful use with a heat gun, but that wasn't being attached to a plastic surface.
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