Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Franken Babies

Like toys? Ever wanted to be Dr. Frankenstein mixing and matching body parts to make something new? Perhaps you have a fetish for genetically modified organisms. Celebrate by making a Franken Baby!

I first saw this concept while attending Burning Man back in 2006. I saw some kids kicking around a large "Poo Ball" which consisted of about twenty Winnie the Poo, stuffed animals sewn together into one large, Poo ball. About a year later at another burn event in Florida I saw some kids making "Franken Babies". I loved it and thought it was a cool, and slightly twisted concept. At the event I made my Cat / Dog shown in the animation below. Cat / Dog was made out of a Winnie the Poo Tigger, dog head and arm, and a nice kitty face growing outta his back. I was proud of my creation and a nice souvenir from the event.

Go down to your local Goodwill and get several stuffed animal toys, rip em apart, mix and match the parts and sew em back together again. Maybe you could make a cool, conjoined twin, two headed Beenie Baby. It's a fun little project that's really easy to do and I guarantee you will enjoy your twisted little creation.

Smile

Weeeeeeeeeee!!!!

Sunday, August 8, 2010

Time Lapse Ceiling Mural


Time Lapse of a huge ceiling mural I painted in 2008. Roughly 360 hours condensed into 47 seconds. This painting creates the illusion of extended archetecture within the dining room ceiling space. There are four European landscape scenes painted within four decorative medallions. There are two Roman styled, trompe-l'œil statues at each end of the ceiling, along with columns and balconies and decorative elements throughout the mural. The entire scene is quite awe inspiring when seated at the dining room table below the mural. The ceiling is roughly sixteen feet wide and the entire project took about three months to complete.

The time lapse itself was fun to create. I had to make a "fish eye lens box" so my video camera could capture the whole ceiling. I had some extra reducing lenses around that I acquired from an eyeglass store, (they actually just gave em to me as I originally needed them for a college project years ago), however since they weren't specifically made for my video camera the movie was possibly just slightly lesser of quality, but it worked, and that's all I cared about. The picture below shows the "Fish Eye Lens Box" I created for the video. The entire box fits snugly over my camcorder.

Visit my website for more photos and examples of other murals I've done.
www.ebgallery.com