Sunday, 15 June 2014

Cardboard houses

A few pictures of the two "buildings" made for the schools version of the ginormous turnip, all the buildings were made using some fantastic 3ply card we have our injection moulding plastic delivered in at work. The  card is fantastic, as strong as hardboard but much easier to cut. 
the roof is much thinner and was givn a few coats of paint to help it look suitably wobbly and rough.
Between the houses is Seth in his dog costume. I made the head and my wife the body suit/gloves and feet.

The turnip house, made in two pieces as everything had to fit in the back of our car.


Beach buggy tot rod rebuild

Its been a while since I have posted but that's not to say I haven't been busy, In the last few weeks I have rebuilt the buggy and built two houses for number one son's school assembly. The houses and a fence were for a production of the ginormous turnip, for which they needed a tumbledown cottage and a turnip house along with a length of fence. The same weekend the school held a summer fayre, for which I had foolishly offered the buggy as an attraction. It was a long way from being ready to use, so in the last two weeks I have welded the chassis, painted all the steel, added chrome bumper cages front and back, made and upholstered the interior panels and seats, painted the wheels and built a pretend engine(which annoyingly didn't fit at the 11th hour!)

We made it to the show and it was a real hit, not sure who much we made yet but I had over £50 in my bucket including the float so a reasonable 2h work. :-)

above, on the morning of the show, fitting the wheels.
.
My space on the field with my cottage as a backdrop
OFF ROAD!!! :-)

One of the 80's "Love Is Cards"?

It really could have been built to fit in the back of the car, there is an inch to spare in every direction.




Friday, 7 March 2014

The finished costume!
We'll i should really cover his sword with foil but as he under strict instruction to not take it out of his scabbard I probably don't have to. The Dress up day (For national book day) (Seth was Mark Anthony, his school limited it to Shakespeare costumes) was a big success and both Seth and molly (Who went as Ophilela) went down a storm.   




The belt and "Skirt" are probably the bit that is the closest to being real armor, using the brass discs gave it a  nice weight.
The Scabbard was made from card covered in more sofa remnants.  


Only one post to go. 
 Seth's Roman Helmet, a combination of fomex card and body filler. Amazingly he kept this on pretty much all day. (the blood washed off in the rain :-))
 The Bristles are obviously a cheap broom cut into pieces and glued into the channel across the top.

 All of the straps are from our ever giving sofa! and the studs are upholstery nails. 

There is a little bit of black and green paint to age the "metal" slightly. 

Tuesday, 4 March 2014

Roman costume part 2 (or three, possibly)

As its march and pretty cold, sandals were felt to be out of the question so I decided to make some roman feet. complete with sandals. A large lump of foam rescued from an old sofa was carved and sanded to shape before being painted, having toenails stuck on and a nice brown leather shoe made (More sofa scraps!)

These are currently Seth's least favorite bit of the costume :-)
karl




Monday, 24 February 2014

Roman centurion / Mark Anthony costume

We'll the roman costume using the brass discs ws a complete disaster, it made the shirt ridiculously heavy (especially for a 5year old!)
So undeterred I found a number of old signs at work which were printed on fomex and set about making a new costume for Seth using the fomex to replicate the steel.
A good coating of gold paint covered the old sign content, and photographs really well!

(The shirt is nothing to do with the costume)

Still lots more to do to this, more straps and a little ageing to stop it looking too new. 
More tomorrow.