First use the right polymer clay. Sculpey III though cheaper is really really mushy. I like a Super Sculpey/Sculpey Firm mix or Premo Sculpey. How firm you like it is up to you personally, I like it a little softer than others because it blends better. This sculpture was Green Premo. It costs more, but watch your Michaels/AC Moore for deals and you can generally get it for $1.25 or less per block. Super Scupley is best ordered online (Firm is only available online as far as I know)
Use tools not fingers - I have tools made of knitting needles and wood which I used primarily. This reduces the heat on the sculpture from your hands.
Series Bake - If you have a detail nicely in place, hit it with a heat gun or bake the piece and then start working from there again. You'll need to paint the baked clay you want to add to with PVA glue and let it dry, but it will stick. This is particularly useful for top/bottom work. On my scorpion I made and baked the tail first, then used that as my grip. If you have too much clay on a baked portion, just pull out your x-acto knife or dremel and cut it off.
Build an armature - This sculpt has a core of 14-16 gauge floral wire (the green stuff) twisted together, then split off to form the legs and arms. The whole thing is then coated in Magic Sculpt, a 2 part epoxy with a long working window. Then coated in PVA glue and the clay is added on top of that. The epoxy is tremendously hard when cured, so it lets me handle the sculpture pretty easily.
I'd recommend checking out Katherine Dewey's Life Like Creatures or Life Like Figures in Polymer Clay books.
this is amazing. how do you got so much detail on your polymer clay projects? Maybe it's just lack of practise but when I use it i find it impossible to get any detail without completely mashing the rest of it! got any tips?
First use the right polymer clay. Sculpey III though cheaper is really really mushy. I like a Super Sculpey/Sculpey Firm mix or Premo Sculpey. How firm you like it is up to you personally, I like it a little softer than others because it blends better. This sculpture was Green Premo. It costs more, but watch your Michaels/AC Moore for deals and you can generally get it for $1.25 or less per block. Super Scupley is best ordered online (Firm is only available online as far as I know)
Use tools not fingers - I have tools made of knitting needles and wood which I used primarily. This reduces the heat on the sculpture from your hands.
Series Bake - If you have a detail nicely in place, hit it with a heat gun or bake the piece and then start working from there again. You'll need to paint the baked clay you want to add to with PVA glue and let it dry, but it will stick. This is particularly useful for top/bottom work. On my scorpion I made and baked the tail first, then used that as my grip. If you have too much clay on a baked portion, just pull out your x-acto knife or dremel and cut it off.
Build an armature - This sculpt has a core of 14-16 gauge floral wire (the green stuff) twisted together, then split off to form the legs and arms. The whole thing is then coated in Magic Sculpt, a 2 part epoxy with a long working window. Then coated in PVA glue and the clay is added on top of that. The epoxy is tremendously hard when cured, so it lets me handle the sculpture pretty easily.
I'd recommend checking out Katherine Dewey's Life Like Creatures or Life Like Figures in Polymer Clay books.
i showed my little brother and he couldn't believe that it isn't real
good work (Y)