Work in Progress

The grinding chamber!

 
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No, that's not a title of a campy horror flick, though blood does get spilled in there from time to time.

I finish my metal works in that invaluable little glass 'room', which contains the heavy dust and metal shavings until they get sucked up into the extractor. Before I got this baby, I would loathe the thought of doing metal finishing, as my desk and my whole studio would get very dirty and dusty, but since I got this chamber for my debris extractor, the cleanup is minimal and working conditions are safe. I love safety.

I bought the main plastic shell online, and then extensively customized it to fit my needs better, adding side walls and leather flaps. The problem is that it's plexy glass and it's starting to get really scratched up by all the high velocity debris flying around in there, and once it gets too cloudy to see through it, I'm going to have get a new one and customize it all over again.

Luckily my little grinding chamber still has lots of hours on it, which reminds me that I've gotta go back 'in there' and set some stones into the cone for the upcoming show doll in Berlin. Stay tuned for the pictures in a few days!

Enchanted resin dolls have glass eyes

 
 
 
 

And tiny eyelashes!

At first I wasn't sure if I wanted to give my resin dolls glass eyes, but once I found the right kind of eyes, I was won over. This in turn, allowed me to give these dolls real eyelashes, something I've always wanted to do, but was unable to due to the shallow surface area of porcelain eyelids. The eyes are tacked on with a sticky gum inside, which means they can be changed fairly easily. The head cap is magnetic and the head is removable from the rest of the body. The doll is strung up with elastic and it articulates and holds poses very well. I am very happy with the quality of resin and the soft, satin glow of the skin.

Tomorrow I'll shoot all my newly painted resin dolls and show you all of it!

The most beautiful porcelain hand I ever made!

 

I made this hand for my test doll. I'm convinced it's the most beautiful hand I ever made. You see, I don't just pull a hand out of the mold and fire it, I manually shape and sculpt it to make it more expressive. Unfortunately, expressive, tiny hands are virtually impossible to mold with the rigid plaster molding method. So, they have to be very simplified in order to be mold-able. Therefore, each hand undergoes significant re-sculpting and remodeling in the post-molding period.

I separate the fingers, define the knuckles and establish the bending angles on all the fingers. It's ridiculously tedious and I hate doing it, while simultaneously loving it. I estimate that it takes me 2-3 hours to make one hand from casting to painting, or 4-6 labor hours+ 12 kiln firing hours for a pair of hands for one doll.

This hand is the pinnacle of my achievement. Just wanted to share it.

Editing the Enchanted Doll book

My editor is in the process of polishing up my writing for the book before it goes to print in two weeks. I took a day off molds in order go over the latest revisions she had sent me and spent most of it editing at my alternate (and rather comfortable) working station until my laptop got tired, said: "Adios Amigos!" and promptly crashed. Thank software engineers for auto-save. The deadline approaches...it's the nature of deadlines.

I love my job.

 

Molds-behind the scenes

 

Some more peeks of my current projects. Making more molds.

These shots were taken just this morning. So tired... I wish I could just go to sleep, but my mind is restless...13 hours spent in clay, water and plaster up to my elbows don't think I can stand the feeling of clay on my hands any more...skin is so dry and tight, I just want to jump out of it, like a lizard, God I wish I were done with this already but there are so many more...oh my god I hate making molds so very much alas, that's what it takes to make what I want to make and I will make it so help me god...at least I've got a few more episodes of the Tudors left why is the iPad screed so shiny and reflective? is my nose too long? why did Henry the 8th come to hate Anny Bolyn so much? did he really believe she was a witch? my fingers are so pruney I wonder how much water they can absorb before the skin starts falling off the bones... can that happen? if only this part would just set already so that I can take it out and clean up I should also sweep before I drag these plaster crumbs all over the place I really need to clean this place up, if only I were finished with these stupid molds already...I need some hand cream......man, my orange tree is going to freeze outside if it keeps getting colder, I wonder if I ought to pull it back in? I should stop dropping my flipflop every time I tuck my knee under so that the chair wouldn't roll over it and get stuck every time I move, and why do I have to tuck my knee under every time I sit down anyway? I, like, don't even notice how it happens...god, my knee is so sore I wish I would just stop doing that, when is this mold going to set already...?Ouch! pay attention when you're using dental tools if you want to keep all your fingers...perhaps a knife would be better to trim this seam...this towel is covered with clay I need a new one...Chad? Chad?! damn, he is wearing headphones in there...I'll have to put this down and hope it holds for a few seconds...ohh for crying out loud, that stupid flipflop!!......

New Molds

 

Happy New Year, everyone!

I've had a great holiday, a wonderful end of 2011 and a fantastic beginning of 2012! I'm so excited about this year! With all the new things I'm working on, I can just feel how awesome it's going to be! I'm bursting at the seams with creative energy and can hardly contain myself.

The Enchanted Doll book is undergoing final edits and will be going to print in three weeks, on February 1st.I, in the meantime, have been sketching out new project ideas, creating rough machetes and making new molds. You know how much I like to keep things secret until they're finished and until I know 100% that the are going to work, but I'm very compelled to give you a few sneak peeks of what I've been working on. Perhaps I should. Perhaps I will...Alright, meet me here next week for some peeks.

Back to work now. Art can not wait to get made!

The Enchanted Doll grand prize

..For the 2011 Birthday Contest Winner!

The grand prize doll Lily has been completed and will be shipped to its new owner this week. Amal, please let me know you're in town and confirm you shipping address.

This still frame animation depicts some steps in the painting process of Lily, showing how it starts out and it's final look, but there are other steps between the layers that aren't shown, such as firings, of course. This head was painted in 3 china layers and 3 kiln firings. You can see how each layer fades after each firing, and has to be built back up to gradually intensify. It's a one step forward, two steps back kind of process.

Due to the unique transparency and non-drying characteristics of china paint, which require multiple firings to set, the painting process is driven and defined by the two conflicting targets: To paint the doll in as fewer layers as possible to minimize the number of firings, while simultaneously achieving the ultimate feature shapes, vibrancy and depth of colors.

After years of practicing china painting, I've finally come up with a suitable analogy to describe its multiple characteristics: China paint is like watercolors because it’s translucent; like oil paint, because it doesn’t dry; like digital graphics, because all layers must be kept separated and like ceramic glaze, because it bonds only through kiln firing.

A completed doll face. This one is for you, Amal. Claim your prize!

Work in Progress: Shoes for Cixi

 

Concept sketches for the shoes.

Wax models of the shoes in the works. I hope to finish the second one by Wednesday and begin molding. It's probably the most challenging pair I've made so far. I'm worried about the mold design and the inject-ability of these molds and hope to find out if they work by the end of the week.

Tonight I've got lots of writing to do, but it's hard, because I can't stop thinking about these unfinished waxes sitting on my desk.