About Me

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I am a graduate from Cleveland College of Art and Design where I studied Entertainment Design Crafts where I specialised in set design and making.

Wednesday, 11 July 2012

Earrings

I fancied having a go at making a pair of earrings, so I made these.  I know there quite simple but it was my first attempted, I think I will try something more difficult next time.

Saturday, 30 June 2012

Flower dish

This is a small flower dish I made as a present, it also has an insert in one of the petals for hair clips to sit.  The bottom image shows it with jewellery sat in the dish area.



Friday, 8 June 2012

Finished piece set up at the degree show.

These are photos of my finished set.  The bottom left image is how I set it up for the degree show. 


Monday, 14 May 2012

Making the sweet shop

(Left) I started by using the templates I had created from my white model to make the parts I needed.  I used three layers of ticket card instead of mount board as the sweet shop is circular and mount board would be too thick to use.  I glued the window sills on before bending the three levels of the sweet shop together.  I couldn't completely put the sweet shop together until I had painted the window frames and put the windows in place, which were made from acetate that I had printed the window design on.

 (Right) In these pictures I was making the shop window, I made it out of mount board and painted it a wood effect.  I then made sweets for the window out of Sculpey and foil and painted them bright colours.  The window seemed to to look a bit empty when I put it together to see what it looked like, I realised that it was missing a shelf.  So I made one to fit inside and made some bowls and put beads in for sweets, then stuck the window pane and window sill/shelves in place.  I put three arches in a couple of millimetres apart so that it would give the curve of the top of doorway more structure.  The next step was to paint the door and window sills and then the main sweet shop.
(Left) This is the completed sweet shop with my design next it.

Wednesday, 9 May 2012

Creating the base board and trellis

 To create the bases for my sets I cut out two boards.  The board for my stately home set is 2ft by 4ft but was cut in to an 'L' shape so that the sweet shop set could be placed behind it on a separate podium higher up.

(Image above) First I drew out ground plan and painted the board with three layers of paint to get natural tones of grass, I also used a sponge to create a stippled effect to get more of a grass texture.  I then used a product similar to flocking called Fine turf over the paint to create the grass areas.  To create the gravel path up to the door of the stately home I used a product made from ground up nut shells.

(Image above) This is the trellis I made for the side of the stately home.  I made it from a very soft thin piece of wood which I cut up into strips then glued into place.  To make the flowers I used green florists wire and then got small strips of purple/pink and green tissue paper layered it on top of each other and twisted the wire which created the flower.  I then wrapped the strips of flowers round the trellis.  

Monday, 30 April 2012

The rest of my trees for the set


For the Tinkle-tinkle trees I created a wire mesh column to start the trunk of the tree.  Then with tin foil I made 'sticks' and glued them at the base individually, twisting them round the trunk to get the style of tree that was in my design (picture on the left) 




(Picture below) Here I covered the armature with Sculpey (an oven bake clay) to make the Tinkle-tinkle tree.  I made the hands without an armature and this proved to be quite difficult with the size of them, I then decided to change the original armature.  By putting flat 'pads' on the ends of the 'sticks' that were wrapped round the trunk, which formed both the twisted trunk and branches, made it easier for me to sculpt the hands.
(Left) This is a close up of an example of one of the hands that would be used on the Tinkle-tinkle trees.  This also gives you a sense of the size and the detail in it.





(Below) The finished Tinkle-tinkle tree before being baked, each one of the Tinkle-tinkle trees had 20 (or there abouts) hands on them.





(Left) These pictures are of the construction and finished pieces before baking.  The top two are the Apple trees, the middle two are none specific trees and the bottom two are bushes.  They were all created in the same way as the Tinkle-tinkle trees and the Cherry trees using the same methods.



(Below) These are all the trees I created for my animation set.  After painting them I added foliage to the trees, Cherry trees and bushes.  I painted a glaze over the apples to make them shine and pink and purple flowers were added to the Tinkle-tinkle trees.  The pink and purple flowers were made from Sculpey (the petals) and inside each set of petals there was two sets of three beads strung and glued together to get the effect I wanted.
 

Monday, 16 April 2012

My Cherry Trees

These are what I have created from my designs...


...these are the cherry trees before I painted them...

.. this is after being painted and here I was putting the foliage on...


...this is my Cherry Tree finished with the the cherries on.



The Giraffe, The Pelly and Me - statley home

I started making my stately home out of mount board, I hand cut it all out even though I no I could have used a laser cutter I felt it would give it more character.
I glued all the window sills, frames and sides together to create the stately home and added the brick detail, doorway and roof trim before starting to paint it.
I painted the base colour on first then the window frames and sills, which was quite difficult as the frames are quite small and there is a lot of them.


 I painted the roof trim and the started on painting the marble effect.  I painted on the lines in a colour slightly darker to the base colour and then wash the colour from the line down.  I then used a plastic bag and dry brushed on to it and pressed it on to the walls of the stately home (image on the bottom left)  Then using a wet brush smudged the darker colour that I had just applied to make the marble effect.





Below is my finished model of the stately
 home fully painted.

Thursday, 15 March 2012

Paintings

These are a couple of paintings from some photos I took that I quite liked.

Butterfly, acrylic and pencil. 
By using the acrylic quite thick it give the picture more texture.



Old bridge in france, watercolour and pencil.

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

Roald Dahl- The giraffe, the pelly and me

The Giraffe, the Pelly and Me by Roalh Dahl.

The book i have chosen is briefly about a boy called Billy who wants to make an old sweet shop a sweet shop again but it is bought by a giraffe, a pelican and a monkey. They have a Ladderless Window Cleaning company and need the boys help. They get a job from the duke to clean his manor, when cleaning his manor they see a jewellery thief in action and act upon it.  To repay them for catching the thief the duke lets the giraffe, pelican and monkey live with him on his estate and the boy gets to make the marvellous sweet shop with help from the Duke.


I am creating sets for animation for the book and these are some of my designs...

 This is an apple tree, I have used hands to hold the apples.  I decided to use this theme throughout the trees. 


 Cherry tree.



Tinkle tinkle tree


This is the final design for my sweet shop set. 


The final design for the tinkle tinkle tree plantation with the back of the stately home in view.


Background design for an advertising project.

I chose the channel E4 for the advertising project I had in 2nd year,
these are backgrounds I designed for the animation.




I made the flower from the designs above for a stop motion animation.  I had never done this before so it was my first time but I managed to create one from the story board I had made.  I didn't find it very difficult but I did realise how many frames you had to have to make it flow.
Below is the flower that I had made.  It is made from material that I dyed myself so I had the exact colours I wanted.  I then cut out a pattern and sewed it together and stuffed it with wadding, the stem and leaves had wire in them so I was able to bend and move them where I wanted.  In the picture at the bottom I had created a base for the flower to grow through, I made the mud/soil from sawdust and PVA glue and then painted it.



These are a few different angles of a 60's style living room I made, it is in the scale of 1:25.

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