I doubt that almost no one has similar dolls what I do. Blergh. It's nice to know.
After making accidentally short female dolls, I wanted to do things what I am more comfortable with - so I created a BIG MALE RAT who is just so different from those as possible. Ooooor... Not that much, he is simply big and cute. The difference is in someone else I made after this one.
For first, I made him a wire armature from thicker wire. Over it I added thinner red wire. It helps clay to stick and makes everything just better and stronger.
Of course, as I am mad about recording creating processes of my things in every possible way, I shot him with flash with other dolls standing next to him. Here with Asko and Rämä. I still noticed that his legs aren't as long as I want them to be, but bllll another doll can get long legs then. That's my logic.
Yet some closeups of wiring details. If anyone finds these somewhat helpful for dollmaking, feel free to steal my techniques. Being helpful is nice. And to point a bit about why things are as they are, I added more wire to the head to keep it strong enough for bending the neck. As well as that, I added wires coming from shoulders to his ribcage sides to keep arms in right position easier; clay is still going around the wires and hides all that.
I decided to test how the tail works if I leave it without red wire. |
Remember to keep in mind how much wire you need to bend before adding clay; it's easy to make limbs wrong length. |
Ribcage wires. |
Then I added clay to his upper body; head, shoulders, tummy... Or part of tummy. Sadly I didn't bother to photograph him after that until finishing, but it's just OK because finishing things is more important that showing camera in every possible step. That small glue bottle (Eri-Keeper; good for wood and paper, not for tackmaking, to mention if anyone wants to know) kept him on his legs while the clay dried; he was and is heavy, even when known that foam clay is very lightweight compared to many other clays people use.
(Sometimes I decide to remove clays just after sculpting, as happened with Hupi once.) |
I use beads for eyes and paint them before finishing whole doll. |
Because I added more clay to his body, these spots (in his back and tummyside) aren't visible anymore. I added more brown spots on the clay what hides those seen in the photo. |
Okay, so there were those progress pics. Now I throw you with photos he's already finished in. At the same time I try to do a funnier job and, instead of just showing what the finished thingy looks like, I JUDGE my own work. That's nothing unusual from me, I just haven't been OK with writing well lately, thanks to the damn internet...
Need to mention, before anyone gets confused, that I called this as Hupi. It's Finnish and means fun or amusement. For real name I could add Dandy, suggested by my twin. Others (dolls) just call this ratty Hupi for some reason.
He turned to be tall, as I planned, that's the good part. Breyer dolls look short next to him.
What about the head, it also is OK for my taste. I recognize it to be clearly a domestic dumbo eared rat. But, to be honest, maybe the neck starts from a bit too behind, making it look weird. A real rat has neck bone from that, but these dolls are anthros, not real rats (so-called ferals, an opposite for furry, meaning the normal non-anthro animal), so they should have fitting necks too. But I like his face anyway. Good head is more important that right start for a neck...
But does he also have mistakes, like too big nose and slightly stupid face pattern... But those don't disturb so much as if I had placed eyes badly or if the side profile looks nothing ratty. That nose just makes him remind a bit from ferrets... As dumbo rats can do, often, with their lower-set ears.
I really planned Hupi to have a white mohawk and beard too, but after seeing his face, I didn't bother to glue there anything else... Because I am better at ruining hairings than finishing it well. Someone else can be my first full-coated (fake, because of clay) male rat with a mohawk.
After finishing the claywork and painting (eyes, and skintone to his lips), I decided to go crazy and add metal pieces. Hupi wears stupid earrings, but is also my first rat sculpt who has a nosering now. I simply punched a needle through the nose and placed an opened ring there; didn't actually close it, but yea, if it stays well enough, it works.
His patterns are OK to me, although I have started to think if I possibly added too much spots. He was really meant to be just a masked rat with one or two extra spots somewhere (at tummy, I guess), everywhere else he was meant to be white. But look at him now... Brown spots in tummy, back, chest, and legs. I haven't taken naked photos of him as finished, but they all can be seen from that when I take.
Sorry from showing this bad photo, but that shows how the leg's upper part is sculpted. |
Ignore his clothes. I hate making any fabric works, but I am forced to, because dolls need clothes and I want to use my leathers for model horse tack and other strap-like works only... Except if I have bad leather, but a vest made from that happened for another doll (and isn't any better in quality).
Wire neck hiding with scarf is another tradition I have started. And aaaagh look at the cloth COLORS. I hate them. Hupi, for real, is meant to wear metal style clothes, so he should get a long black leather jacket someday, as well as black trousers, boots, etc. Just black leather with gold colored metal pieces, that's what he needs. Nothing stupid yellow towels with sugary red. Urgh.
But now, off the cloth discussion. I judge my doll here. His clay job is quite OK enough to my view, and I find him really photogenic. Even the fact that he has just stupid leather pieces hiding wires in lower legs and arms does not disturb me that much; I know I can rip those off and add something better instead, if I feel right to. But just now I am OK with what he is, because I simply can never finish anything if I try to make things better what I have skill to.
Hupi started to make different positions and show interest to things before I had fully captured him... So... What can we expect from his future? He was the one who brought a new halter (again) to the stable and tested it for Remu (one horse).
And, I think, because he's a buck rat (male rats are 'bucks'), he likes to sniff air when ladies are around. (I have read that when female rats - does - are in heat, they smell like flowers. So weird.) But because he is also a gentleman, he does that more secretly to avoid disturbing anyone. That just is a way to get information in rat style; to smell things.
He got a weird pattern to his right knee. It's very weird decision from me. A heart! I hate hearts generally, but as Hupi mixes so many things I like, I wanted to make a heart-shaped spot to him somewhere. So he has now a heart at his knee. I originally tried to sculpt it to the other leg or tummy, or something, but I didn't like it's too recognizable shape, so I added more brown clay on. This knee spot is pure accident, what I simply shaped a bit with a barbecue stick, but the biggest fun in clay rats is to allow patterns to make themselves mostly without help.
His jacket is too short and stupid at all, so I need to reposition it few times if I want to photograph him believably from all sides.
Paws are made from leather, as always with my rat dolls. There's wire inside, so they are bendable. To protect the leather I better keep the hands in hook shape, as they are just meant to hold things. Sometimes I wish I could dare to open them more, but... Just because of the leather, I don't dare to. (I bend them with round-nosed pliers.)
Then there's a tail, an important part of a rat doll. It's just a metal wire who got leather glued on. There's no possibility to add any rounder shape anywhere in my skills, so that's what we have yet... But aaagh it works well and looks good enough! Glad I'm so damn perfectionistic, it seemingly makes things happen...
Making a doll tail from wire and leather seems to be easier than drawing a good looking one with drawing tablet, I think... |
Rämä and other shorter dolls look TINY next to Hupi, yeeee! It's cute to see. If I now get a fake reason to use black clay, because, aaargh, I want to sculpt a mother for that rat kid! No matter that Hupi easily behaves like a dad with younger ones around him, ehm. And as Hupi still is planned to get a family created later (when I have more materials), I simply want more dolls, MORE DOLLS.
He wasn't fully dry yet when took those pics, so I didn't dare to bend him to ride a horse yet then. Later I took some pics from his rides. Sadly, because my dolls haven't trousers (except Breyer CM dolls), I hide their legs and bodies with bad cloth and that also makes impossible to show well what their positions are. I am really fanatic with realism and that's important to me, not only with the horses but as well with dolls too. Both should work, and it's not that often seen when they do. (Breyer dolls' factory faces, what the?)
But because my dolls aren't meant to be people at all, they have some species-specific features. I find this funny and useful.
Hupi has quite typical personality of a domestic rat who had good growing-up environment. He's friendly, cute, healthy and curious, yet very funny. And, typically for male rats, he's also somewhat lazier and likes easy things (food and sleeping).
Okay, this view isn't so good for those legs... |
Aaaand... If anyone waited to see good riding photos where the rat really shows it's position... I mention that I should photograph my dolls naked, I should bend them to riding positions naked, I should do this and that. Haven't popped to my mind yet while having camera in my hands, because, well, I don't plan everything so surely as others; I just wash hands and wear white cotton gloves before grabbing dolls and horses I need for that photo story (or whatever I am going to capture), and that's it. Many things make themselves alone.
It's called as imagination, I think.
(Again one note about the blog; I have a lot of things to write what focuses to dolls. Sorry. But I also have nice news about my tackmaking life - in Stablemate scale!)
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