Monday 8 February 2016

Labrador Gift

Project to celebrate another great canine friend completed - Sculptress JOEL delighted to have the privilege of capturing the portrait sculpture of a Chocolate Labrador dog - here he is and now his Bronze





 Here a close up of that happy face and with his pal - scroll down for the stages in the project to capture his portrait sculpture for a very special birthday celebration.


First stage  will be to make the armature  and study  and measure the images

Wire of  the armature for the body, head and legs


First clay working up towards the profile of the back


next to start filling out the front profile, including that Labrador chest


Several sessions later and both profiles have been built up

rear view


Left side, underside coming to profile

More study on key reference points
Intensive sessions to build up the body and match the key points


Noticing the shape of the breast and shoulder


The head is a little high, but will work up to that from the details of the paws upwards






Filling out front and rear views
you can see I have just put a quick hint of the clay on his back legs which will be the development of skin and fur on his hips as he sits

Top line is coming good
As the chest and abdomen are nearly completed the front legs can be fixed in place and filled out ...I must give him his tail  !!

The long haul...we can see different areas being filled in and the beginnings of muscle groups developing





as each area comes closer to its finished profile, other sections need to be 'realigned' and altered - the left side is often the one that is worked on first.




The key point reference pins help and turning the sculpture and viewing from different angles.


Also time spent looking at the different images and glancing at the clay sculpture


We have a Labrador head and body developing and some of the character of the individual


View without pins! and a time to rest. 
Tail more in place and front paws sketched in.


Here a look at the lovely and inspiring original, keeping him in view




More work, many hours yet it is not so easy to see where we have been!


Filling out the bottom  and top lines, studying the angles and adding muscle 



the shoulder line is improving



and the body development is noticeable  on the  Front and back views



in go the pins again


more work needed on the shoulders, rump and neck...then on with  the details of the feet and mouth

It is more difficult to see at a glance where all the changes and hours of work have been made

The abdomen is filled out again both from the side and across the width, downwards to the ground. More breadth and muscle on the back legs.




The armature has been strengthened from underneath
 and those front paws are now fixed


More added to the  shoulders and neck 
and the beginnings of all that lovely ruff of hair.

You cannot see it happen ... but in among the time  spent was 45 minutes of just looking at the  clay model, turning it  and glancing at the  photographs.
I am often asked how long projects take...and I wonder if people would include looking and thinking time.
I also often glance at a work in progress as I pass it to do other chores, and spend hours looking at certain features such as paws, both on the clay model, in images, the individuals paws  and  studies of bone and  muscle.
Notice Rufus often sits with his paws turned out slightly.

Work has happened on the front legs now they are fixed.


Many areas  carefully filled in and  checked from side to side

 Different light conditions and more  texture to the skin and hair of the flanks, ruff and neck
Progress to the rear view

 Checking other angles and  a view of the work area





You can see a pin placed as a note for more work and study of the jaw line
Now for the eyes and  more details of his face






Next to go over all the  surface and check the paws, and keep working on the face. The mould made and ...

here he is in wax 


and Bronze

His owners comment  "Looks absolutely terrific"