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Cartoon-accurate Skyfire (work in progress)

PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2008 7:19 pm
by huryochagi
Hi,

I just registered on Seibertron.com and this is my 1st message. I've been working on my cartoon-accurate Skyfire for many weeks now. It's not finished yet but I guess the results so far have progressed enough to give an impression of what the end result will look like. The figure is based on a Classics Jetfire. I bought Classics Jetfire for the sole purpose of converting it into Skyfire. I made every part that doesn't belong to Classics Jetfire with putty.

Initially, I wanted to show it when it's finished but I guess a preview won't hurt.

I made these photo's at night so the quality has room for improvement.

When it's finished, I'll publish the video on my YouTube-channel at http://www.youtube.com/huryochagi

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire

PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2008 7:30 pm
by Sonray
Coming along nicely. Youve managed to give it a very boxy feel like the G1 cartoon designs had.

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire

PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2008 7:31 pm
by Liege Evilmus
GREAT WORK!

A terrific way to introduce ones self!

And if I may...

WARNING, SEIBERTRON CONTAINS NUTS

now don't say no one told you :D

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire

PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2008 7:45 pm
by Sonray
Liege Evilmus wrote:GREAT WORK!

A terrific way to introduce ones self!

And if I may...

WARNING, SEIBERTRON CONTAINS NUTS

now don't say no one told you :D


DAMMIT!
I totally forgot to do that...you SWINE! :-x

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire

PostPosted: Fri Jan 11, 2008 8:01 pm
by Deadpool.
Excellent work!

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire (work in progress)

PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 10:33 am
by Venomous Prime
You..are..my..hero..

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire (work in progress)

PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 11:43 am
by primezimm
This looks cool! Skyfire has aleays been my favorite and I hated the fact thatr they never produced a toy based on the cartoon character. I have a G1 jetfire that I'm trying to customize into Skyfire. I also have drawings where I'm trying to figure out the design and challenges to a Skyfire plane to scale with... probably delux size, to drive the characters into it. I wanted to buy the classics because of the similarity, now I'd like to havce it just for this custom! Welcome to the site! I'm one of the Transtopia transplants (no pun intended) Lots of cool things to check out here and plenty of advice and help.

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire (work in progress)

PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 12:32 pm
by huryochagi
Thanks, everyone! :)

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire (work in progress)

PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 1:58 pm
by Jazz Reborn
how do you make parts from putty.

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire (work in progress)

PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 2:39 pm
by huryochagi
jazz reborn wrote:how do you make parts from putty.


It was my first attempt at a kitbash/custom so I'm not sure if this is the best way to do it but what I do is sculpt a basic form. I let it dry, cut off the unnecessary pieces (too much putty, etc.), sand the correct parts to flatten them and add another layer of putty to it. I continue this process of cutting, sanding and adding layers until I get a satisfying result. In the meantime, when I'm working on a part that needs details/lines in it, I carve the details with a hobby knife in the putty before it's dried. If you're not satisfied with a part, you can always sand or cut it off, add new putty on top of it and resculpt that part.

I don't know if there are better ways, but this is how I did it.

Re: Cartoon-accurate Skyfire (work in progress)

PostPosted: Sat Jan 12, 2008 3:37 pm
by Sonray
huryochagi wrote:
jazz reborn wrote:how do you make parts from putty.


It was my first attempt at a kitbash/custom so I'm not sure if this is the best way to do it but what I do is sculpt a basic form. I let it dry, cut off the unnecessary pieces (too much putty, etc.), sand the correct parts to flatten them and add another layer of putty to it. I continue this process of cutting, sanding and adding layers until I get a satisfying result. In the meantime, when I'm working on a part that needs details/lines in it, I carve the details with a hobby knife in the putty before it's dried. If you're not satisfied with a part, you can always sand or cut it off, add new putty on top of it and resculpt that part.

I don't know if there are better ways, but this is how I did it.



Nope this is pretty much how everyone does it. :)