Plush making advice I wish someone told me by Skeleion, journal
Plush making advice I wish someone told me
I shared this advice over on Diffeomorphismhttps://vengefulspirits.deviantart.com/journal/Calling-all-plush-makers-novice-and-expert-417399214 journal but I thought I would share it here too.
Shaving Faux fur:
For Faux fur plushie makers, You should invest in a WAHl Kennel Pro, I bought two Andis clippers, both gave out after trimming faux fur for a few min. Also Make sure to keep your Clippers oiled and cleaned after using.
I recommend trim the Faux fur first before cutting out the pattern, so if you do cut too deep you can always make a new piece to replace it before sewing your plush together. Make sure to trim with the fur pile not a
I've recently left my job in the game industry so that I could focus more of my time and attention on Lackadaisy. Patreon is my weapon of choice in trying to see this to fruition.
If more Lackadaisy comic updates, illustrations, tutorials, mini-comics, books and other things interests you, please do check it out!
Notes on Character Design
I received the question pictured below at my tumblr blog. In case it's useful to anyone here, I decided to go ahead and use this otherwise dormant journal to share the article I put together in response.
Character design and drawing are tome-sized topics and even if I had all the answers (I don't - I h
What do you fellow artists do after your initial creativity? How do you hold on to your piece and push yourself to finish it? If you'll visit my profile/gallery, you'll see that I don't have any finished pieces (I don't have a lot of pieces submitted, and that's mostly in part by the fact that I never finish what I start. I don't see a point in submitting an unfinished piece). I have countless pieces that I've started just sitting on my computer, but I never get the drive to finish anything. There are two reasons I never finish a piece: 1. I look back at it the next day and it no longer seems interesting, or it no longer looks good to me, and