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Post by brynbrenainn on Jul 16, 2007 7:51:14 GMT -5
Hmmm.... I had better start with saying that I am not a very good blogger, so this might be written quite sporadic.... Anyways... I have recently bought a book (again ). The book is on a specific paper artform that the artist is calling Gupit-Gupit. That means cut-cut in Tagalog, national language of the Phillipines. Take one piece of paper and cut and fold it into an almost 3D piece of art. Mostly animals. He lets the shape and folds speak for themselves, but I am going to texturize. He had some examples of snakes in the book, and I saw the sollution on my problems with the Kaathon! I have already made a - very - rough vanilla of the Kaathon, pics to come. Facts on the book for anyone interested: Paper, Scissors, Sculpt! by Ben A Gonzales ISBN-13: 978-1-4027-4064-0 Publisher: Sterling Publishing Co. Edit: Wohoo! I can post a pic! I am an interweb wizard!
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Post by brynbrenainn on Jul 19, 2007 0:32:48 GMT -5
Right... I have uploaded three pics of the vanilla Kaathon on P_W. However, I cannot post them here... I am not all that computer savvy... ;D ;D ;D So, here is the link to the folder: gallery.papermakeit.com/index.php?cat=10028Hope you likey... I do. The Kaathon will be a real treat to finish. Do you think it is too big compared to the Pygmies? Or just right? /B
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Post by mahotsukai on Jul 19, 2007 15:54:49 GMT -5
Right... I have uploaded three pics of the vanilla Kaathon on P_W. Hope you likey... I do. The Kaathon will be a real treat to finish. Do you think it is too big compared to the Pygmies? Or just right? /B Very nice! Can't wait to see them in colour. Lots of variation I hope. Maybe a use for UCM for the variations.
As to size, no I don't think they look too big, big enough to snack on Pygmies, but not too big.
Larry
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Post by brynbrenainn on Jul 20, 2007 11:42:14 GMT -5
That was a good idea ,ucm is a cool way to make lots of different minis. I will look into the possibilities. Since I want it to be scaly I have to play around with gradients abit. But that is not a problem - it is a challenge.
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