Wednesday, May 02, 2018

Janta Nanxa Demon

This was a fairly experimental shoot.I mainly wanted to test several ideas and figured it was easiest to just try it all at once that way I'd only mess up one shoot rather than several.

First thing was to see if there was a way to speed up the body painting process. I don't do it too often mainly because it takes so long, so I had the idea of using a paint spraying with a much more powerful air compressor, still keeping it well within the safe range in terms of PSI though. I did it with a homemade Pax paint, which would have worked better had I not used cheap acrylic paint - it clogged up with lumps a couple times.

Overall it worked as well as I'd hoped. I only had a few spots where the paint tore off upon contact with other painted skin, mainly on the back of her legs in a couple spots and that could very well have been totally my fault not taking enough care overall.





Another test was using a latex cowl instead of a foam latex one. This was partially to speed up and make the creating process a little less costly. The cowl itself turned out pretty good, easy to pre-paint and worked great to apply all the hair to it. I then had the idea to blend it in on the neck with some simple foam latex blenders - this wasn't all that successful, it worked okay and I knew there might be issues, I was totally right about the issues. Not sure if I'll try this idea ever again, unless I come up with a different design that avoid the pitfalls of this attempt.




Another experiment was the blue scales. As much as I like using the airbrush and a stencil, it gets a little creatively stale after a fashion and the blue never really pops when painted over orange, so I figured, let's just do up several sheets of scales and glue them all on, one by one.

The scales where too thick, so it was hard to demould, only 1/3 turned out. I tinted the batch of foam, that made it much easier so I didn't have to paint each one. The large scales were really easy to apply, held up for the duration of the shoot, they took a long time to apply though. The smaller scales weren't so great to work with, but using only a few it's worth it.




Overall it turned out pretty well, it was a very long exhausting shoot but it worked. The orange looks great, not a faded dull colour (I did touch it up a bit, but not too much), the scales work really well. The 6 foot mohawk was a bit of a pain in the ass by time, but still worth the effort.

















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