Box of Joy, Part II.


From Marcus, resin-metal (stainless and nickel steel) wondrousness! (Yes, one of them is upside down, because it’s for adult eyes only.) They need a bit of polishing with steel wool, which is being lovingly done by Rick. The Buddha was first, and now has a place of honour on my desk shelves, because he just makes me happy. Thank you, Marcus!

Box2

Comments

  1. johnson catman says

    Did Marcus cast those himself or were they something he had and passed along? I know he does soap, so just wondering if he also does metal casting.

  2. says

    I didnt sculpt them; they’re cast in molds I made from artworks I found on ebay. I use the molds for soap making, but occasionally if someone wants a resin version I cast it. The resin castings take a whopping 10 minutes or so to make.

    Once you have the silicone mold you can make them in chocolate, ice, resin, soap, whatever.

  3. says

    Ps -- if I sprung for high temperature silicone I could have cast them in pewter. Except that the playing with molten metal scares the bejeebers out of me ever since the time a jeweller friend showed me what happens if you drop molten platinum on a 2x4 (it falls right through, and through the bench and the floor)

  4. kestrel says

    Oooh aren’t those cool! So awesome!

    @Marcus: And yes, it takes a surprisingly small amount of molten metal to ruin your entire day. :-) I don’t cast in the house either, too scary. Nice casting on those!

  5. The Mellow Monkey says

    Marcus

    I didnt sculpt them; they’re cast in molds I made from artworks I found on ebay. I use the molds for soap making, but occasionally if someone wants a resin version I cast it. The resin castings take a whopping 10 minutes or so to make.
    Once you have the silicone mold you can make them in chocolate, ice, resin, soap, whatever.

    That is really cool. Now I’m picturing rubbing myself down with the Buddha in the bath, though. …awkward.

  6. says

    Ice Swimmer:
    Maybe. The surfaces of 3d printed objects are not fine enough yet. Even the cutting tool marks from the CNC are captured in the silicone. I did a mold from a 3d print object and it was too ridgy and pixellated.

    Lost wax is alive and well, of course.
    I can cast beeswax in my silicones. One artist I know has a wax of one of my lifecastings that she is trying to make a mold for pouring glass in.

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