We might just have to shoot this horse
Well I have some bad news. Yesterday, my horse went from this:
To this - not the paint - the shape of the face.
The paint is me scraping it off so I can try to fix this...but honestly I don't know if I can.
I had no idea how it happened. I took those pictures of the red tack earlier and he was fine!
All of a sudden it looks like the right side of his face is about ready to slide off to the ground.
God he looks mad at me.
He didn't fall, besides, if he had hit the ground the mane would have broken. He has fallen over...nothing major...on the table - I don't know maybe even with the towel folded up his own weight squished his face?
These were the thoughts spinning through my head. I about drove myself nuts trying to figure out what happened and how he managed to get a dent in his face with no other damage.
Plus, I needed to figure out how to fix it.
I can sculpt over it....I've done stuff like this on my model horses but normally I cut the yukky part off and sculpt the foundation. This I can't cut off.
One of my friends offered the suggestion of heat causing the problem. The only source of heat I have on my table is my OttLight. But the base is the only thing that gets hot and it's sort of a dome shape. It has a half circle out-panel for the switch and it adds stability to the lamp. But that part doesn't get hot.
I pondered it staring at the lamp for awhile. My brain finally dug up this dusty old file called SPACIAL RELATIONSHIPS.
And I realized what probably happened.
If he was like this on the switch panel. His mane is awful close to the dome part that gets hot.
Metal conducts heat quite nicely. I work on top of a folded towel because I have to lay my models on their sides. If he happened to get moved so that just his head was on that switch panel and the rest of his body on the towel, I probably wouldn't have even noticed - which explains why I didn't notice.
The first two pics seem to be perfect fit, this last pic isn't but if I push him forward just a little then it is. I was having a very hard time moving the lamp and everything else on my disaster of a table and take the pics.
Anyways, I think this might be it. The body was still on the towel, the head somehow got onto this switch panel, and the heat generated from the base of the lamp conducted through the metal. The horse is heavy so he wouldn't have to get very warm, it was probably just enough to lower the metal's resistance and his own weight caved in the face just a little.
This is the only thing I can come up with that comes close to explaining it without damage to the mane and forelock and to any other part of his body.
So I went to work trying to fix it. I've resculpted horses here and there and repaired damages. If this had been one of my resin models. I would have carved out the eye area and started over by building in the skull, eye socket and putting in the eyeball then building the lid and the outside of the orb around it.
Unfortuantely with the metal, I don't have the tools to do that. Maybe if I took my dremel to it...but the lack of control would be a serious issue.
I scored the metal and even sanded it to make it rough and first tried my Apoxie Clay which is a bit firmer than Apoxie Sculpt and dries faster. While I came close it wouldn't stay put as it dried, it would pop off.
I actually had a bit better luck using my carbide scraper to reshape it.
But not much better luck.
I need to reshape the eyeball but that's going to be some tough doing.
These are the tips I've been using (I love this thing - one of the best tools for miniatures or model horses around). I'm going to try to shave the eye down with the knife tip - the one farthest on the left.
For the actual reshaping this is the tip that's been most effective. But it's still difficult and I still have a long way to go.
If I had a model horse that matched the head size, I'd chop it off and swap out the two. Unfortunately while several are close, none really fit.
I'd honestly be better off purchasing another kit and starting over but I don't have the money right now. Most folks want $195 for this model and that doesn't include shipping. Michigan Toy will give me a discount down to $165 but I have to wait 2-3 weeks. If I order direct from Pegaso, that seems to be the cheapest even though the Euro is outperforming the Dollar it would only be about $145 and that price includes the shipping.
But I'll have to wait...unless someone here might have one for sale for a lower price. I'll try throwing a request up.
If I can't find another kit, I'll probably put this one on hold and switch to a different project until I figure out what to do.
Oh well, I gave it a hell of a shot.