My first project will be something a little out of the ordinary for me. This is actually only my second time repositioning a Traditional scale model (and the first one is still unfinished). Most of my customs are Stablemates, and honestly I'm better at tack making most of the time. So Nirvana is a bit of an experiment. He will be a portrait horse, so let's talk about the real Nirvana.
Nirvana is a trail horse at a camp I used to work at. He is 23 years old, and is a BLM mustang from Nevada, according to his freeze brand. (see THIS LINK for a really nice explanation of how to read a freeze brand). Apparently, he came directly from the range to camp and was trained at camp by a wrangler in the early ‘90s. Like all horses, he has his quirks but he’s one of my favorites. I chose Breyer’s John Henry mold to customize as it already looks a lot like Nirvana. This mold was originally intended to portray an old Thoroughbred, so he’ll need some tweaks to become a mustang and some repairs - the mold has odd hooves, and this particular model has a bent leg and doesn’t stand well. He will get a new mane and tail, and a new, lowered neck, among other things.
I’ve been reading a great blog called Don’t Eat The Paint, and I’m going to try her neck sculpting technique for the first time. So it’s off with his head!
Using a hacksaw and an assortment of files and rasps (because the Dremel is broken), I sawed off the tail, neck, ears, and his right eye (it was uneven…I may regret this later) and filed down the nostrils, mold mark, and rounded off any edges.
Also, with a little sanding on the bottom of the hooves, and no neck, this body stands quite nicely...for now. |
An odd, flat neck is better than no neck, right? |
Next time, the scary part: sculpting the neck. I'm aiming for 2-3 posts per week to start with, so part two should be up soon!