Thursday, July 19, 2012

Pin In To Win It

It's GIVEAWAY TIME

I am running a special SOCK MONKEY PENDANT giveaway TODAY ONLY!!

One lucky winner will receive a lovely handmade sock monkey pendant

How to Enter

Click on the Giveaway Image above
This will take you to the giveaway page on Pinterest
1- 'LIKE' the Pin
2- 'Repin' the Pin
3- Comment on the pin, including an email address or other means of notification (to let you know if you won of course)
4- 'Click' the pin, this will take you to my Etsy shop where you can browse my full line of handmade sock monkey Jewelry and Trinkets

Good Luck
And may the odds be ever in your favor -Hunger Games

Saturday, July 14, 2012

Sock Monkey Ornaments

Item of the week: Sock Monkey Ornaments

I have a few new sock monkey ornaments in honor of Christmas In July


But these ornaments are not limited to your Christmas Tree. When the holidays are over and your tree is recycled, simply move your monkey to your car's rear-view mirror for monkey smiles all year long

These ornaments can be purchased in my Artfire Shop and in my Etsy Shop

Thursday, July 12, 2012

July Fairy Baby Part 1

It's been a while since I've sculpted a fairy baby. Looking back at some of my original sculptures I can proudly say that my skill has progressed, but there is always room for improvement.

Even between the 2 fairies pictured above, sculpted about a year apart from each other, there are significant differences. It's the minor details really, that come from practice, practice, practice.
And so I set out to practice. I hope to sculpt a number of fairy babies, and post my progress here, in the hopes that you, the reader, will be generous with your comments and critiques, so that I can hone and improve my skill.

July Fairy Baby

I set about this sculpture without a real vision or plan. My only goal for this baby is to improve my fairy baby sculpting skills. Particularly the facial details and feature placement
(notice the above fairy baby has a very small forehead)
My only 'planning' step was finding a baby reference model from Magic Sculpture I may follow the model loosely, but it does give a basic idea for baby feature placement

Sculpting the Face - Part 1

I created a very basic wire armature covered in foil

I sculpted the face using a new method of adding on small bits of clay to build up the features. Perhaps I mixed a bit too much liquid sculpey into my clay giving me somewhat of a sticky soft mixture. The effects were two-fold. On the one hand, the soft clay is very easy to disfigure, and a slight touch leaves a huge fingerprint indentation.
On the other hand, I love how easy the soft clay manipulates. I can build up and move around features with a few simple tool strokes.
I spent alot of time, perhaps too much, building and placing the features

I got so carried away, I forgot to look at the time, and nearly forgot to prepare for my students arrival (My alter-ego Leah4sci does in-home Private Education)
I normally rest half-finished sculptures on my sculpting glass, however I was afraid the soft clay would flatten my half-finished head. Instead I stood it up with forceps and covered with saran wrap.

To Be Continued...

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Food Processor for Mixing Polymer Clay


Mini Food Processor - AKA My New Toy


I love sculpting in polymer clay, however the process of mixing clay can be VERY tedious. This is especially true when mixing clay for a sculpture for a number of reasons. Using a pasta machine (my old method) for mixing clay takes FOREVER with a somewhat extensive preparation process. Light and fresh clay has a tendency to pick up lint, dust, dirt, anything and everything that happens to be around at the time.
Thus the longer the mixing process, the long the clay is exposed, and the more 'dirty' the clay turns out. The final sculpture looks less 'professional' if it is studded with lint.
And my newer issue with the pasta machine, is the difficulty in adding liquid polymer clay. I've discovered that conditioning some liquid clay into the mix makes it softer and more malleable, however, this was disasterous in my pasta machine meaning I had to do it by hand.
This is especially difficult with my injured hand/thumb (from military deployment)

The old Mixing Process

Preparing the Clay to be mixed (I chose random scraps for this demo)

Each 'blob' of clay has to be slightly conditioned and shaped to fit into the pasta machine

Each blob of clay is run through the pasta machine a few times for a somewhat uniform sheet

The colors to be mixed are stacked, and run through the pasta machine again, and again

and again

Until a uniform color blend is achieved

This process isn't too bad for a smaller sculpture or color combination, but this can take the better part of an hour for something as large as a 3 Inch Bunny

Old vs New

Enter the Food Processor

I've read about artists using food processors for mixing clay, and finally decided to treat myself (Under $20 on amazon) I purchased the Proctor Silex 1-1/2-Cup Food Chopperideal for a small to medium magical sculpture

Does it measure up?

I decided to do my first mixing trial with camera at hand
Preparing a mix of clay to be blended: Sculpey Living Doll and Premo Translucent. I will then add some TLS (Translucent Liquid Sculpey)

I roughly shredded the clay and dropped them into the food processor

Power ON, and WOW!!


I then added a generous few drops of TLS

Total Preparation + Mixing Time: TWO MINUTES,
Level of pain to my injured hand: ZERO

Foreseeable Benefits:

The first and most obvious is TIME. I have essentially cut an hour out of the sculpting process.
On a personal level, this takes the stress of mixing off my hands, ideal for people with hand injuries
I can 'store' the unused clay in the processor. I typically mix up more clay than required. I'd rather mix too much of a clay color, than to run out mid-sculpture and have to try copying the color combination and consistency
The clay keeps CLEAN!! the processor is so tiny, I don't see the need to remove the clay, I will simply store the entire unit on my craft-cart and take out bits of clay as needed. And if a few days pass in between uses I will simply power it up for a few seconds and recondition (re-soften) the clay.
I am in love with my new toy!!

Edited 11 July 2012
Thanks to the comments below regarding the danger of storing clay in the food processor I will only keep the clay in during sculpting and then store in another container so as not to destroy my new toy

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Polymer Clay Wrapped Tube Beads

Item of the Week: Wrapped Tube Beads

This weeks featured item is a fun collection of 'pasta style' wrapped tube beads. Each bead features a unique blend of color derived from my 'crazy cane' style for marbling clay colors. These beads were alot of fun to make and will be a great addition to any Handmade Jewelry or craft projects

This bead set made it onto the front page of Etsy Summer 2011

This set is my favorite color scheme, I just love the way the purples show through



These wrapped tube beads can be purchased in my Artfire Shop and in my Etsy Shop

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Christmas In July - 2012

This week I chose to feature My ENTIRE shop instead of just a single item,
Why is that? because...

It's Christmas In July


July is a notoriously 'slow' month for sales worldwide, and so Christmas in July was born
Shops, businesses, and companies large and small are offering all sorts of sales this month
And MagicByLeah is no different
In honor of Christmas in July EVERYTHING in my shop is marked down a full 20%
So what are you waiting for, Shop MagicByLeah on Artfire and Etsy and start stocking up on gifts for the holidays

Here are just SOME of the great items you don't want to miss out on!!