Tamerlan bust

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sonnenteich

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 5, 2005
Messages
109
Location
Nordhorn, Germany
Hello,
just some photos of my last work

tamerlan18.jpg

tamerlan17.jpg

tamerlan19.jpg


Painted with acrylics and Printers Ink.

Regards Frank
 
The paint work is fantastic I specially like the metals and the ornaments my only cent is the sculpt. looks prety short of shoulders, or the head is too big, but I think the problem are the shoulders...
ER
 
Originally posted by Ernest@Jan 26 2006, 04:04 PM
my only cent is the sculpt. looks prety short of shoulders, or the head is too big, but I think the problem are the shoulders...
ER
Great painting Frank. I will have to agree about the sculpting as I have this bust in the closet. The shoulders are way too small for the head.
 
Great metal work. The ornamentation work is also very nice! I will agree with the others, the sholder seem to fall short, on this otherwise nice piece.

Jay H.
OKC
 
Frank:

Well done. I really appreciate when others take that extra step with the adding of embroidery, etc. I just have to find the guts to give it a try sometime. If you don't mind, can you give a quick run-down on how you executed the metals on the helmet? Thanks
 
Hello
and thanks for your friendly words upon my Tamerlan. It's nice that so many guys like him.
Paul, it's no problem for me to tell you how I painted the patterns:
the pattern on the helm cloth is painted first in a dark reddish brown as a base. I worked from in- to outside, so you only have to paint one correct outer line. Now the yellow followed (mix of flat yellow and redbrown) the same way. The smal parts are painted then with a fine brush with many many corrections until it looked like now.
The pattern on the shoulder were painted simialary. First a brown wood base. Then with a very very dilluted dark brown simple circles - one next to the other. Next step were the lights with brown wood plus yellow and at last ivory. Now followed the outlining of the circles with another dark brown with much water.
That was all and I don't think this is so difficult.
By the way: the anatomy of this bust is based on the original remains of Tamerlan (Timur the lame) which were found 1940 in the former USSR.


Regards
Frank
 
Frank:

Thanks for the advice on the tackling the embroidery. I am in the process of painting the old Andrea Hamian Archer, so I may try it on this piece.

Secondly, how did you do the metals on the helmet?

Cheers
 

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