Author Archives: howie

Sale Day

Today was a profitable day, as I sold 5 plaster heads and Some Handsome Hands to Geoff, the owner of the Art Explosion.  I also sold an El Camino etching to David, the boyfriend of Cricket, one of the artists in the studio.  It’s nice to free up some wall space for my current work, and of course, nice to find loving homes for the pieces.

I also finally finished the gas mask!  After trying several different ways of suspending the pennies behind the eyes (one was using a spring which didn’t work in this piece but will appear in another one), I came up with the idea of using wire mesh.  I wanted something eye catching when distorted by the magnifying glass, and the mesh has a fishnet stocking effect (gee, where have I seen that before?).  It also is evocative of prison bars, which adds an extra little Abu Ghraib to the piece.  Here are some photos:

This is the “you are on” eye, though it’s hard to read in the photo. See how the mesh distorts? Cool, huh?  As you walk around, it appears to undulate.

Here you can see the text of the “the wrong side” eye. This photo is taken from slightly further away, so the penny fills the eye.

This is a piece which started out as an idea – a gas mask with “you are on/the wrong side” behind the eyes, and wound up evolving into a much more complex and visually interesting object. I’m quite pleased with the result, and may revisit the idea once I finish with the current series.  I learned some interesting techniques making it and would like to explore the possibilities on more pieces.

I also assembled the Magritte pipes, though am having trouble gluing them all together in a satisfactory manner.  It should be done tomorrow.

Plasma Cutter: 20000 degrees of fun!

Today I went down to Menlo Park to use the CNC Plasma cutter at last.  I intended to cut a Shanty Town sign for the studio, but was told that the corrugated metal that I bought at Building Resources was galvanized steel which can be very toxic if melted due to chromium gas that is produced.  Think Erin Brockovich.  No thank you.  People were also a bit pessimistic about whether the machine could deal with the corrugation, so brain cancer aside, it probably wouldn’t have worked.

I did, however, cut my doll chain successfully!

This is 18 gauge mild steel.  Note the slight imperfections. This is due to the curve actually being non-contiguous in the software, so the cutter starts and stops repeatedly. Dealing with Corel Draw was quite a pain in the neck.  Initially I had lots of duplicate lines which were a mystery – turns out each line was actually a very skinny outline with a top and a bottom.  I then switched to Adobe Illustrator and had better luck, but still couldn’t get the vectors contiguous (if I spend another hour or two, I could probably figure it out.)  Another option would be to hack the G-code, but that would be a royal pain.

I put the metal on the roller to produce the above.  Turns out, with the slag (the extra melted goop that is produced), and width of the kerf (cutting beam), it’s slightly too small to fit around the bomb sight, and also slightly too high – I was careless on the height. This is what it looks like:

So I made another, this time with 7 figures instead of six as I found the six dolls a bit fat, and thought an odd number might look more interesting.  Here is what I cut:

I sandblasted this one and cleaned up a bit of the slag. I haven’t bent it yet since I am thinking about etching it first, and to do so I need it to be flat. I also want to figure out the rest of the mount before I commit to shaping it.

As it turns out, the machine was quite easy to use. It was the crappy software that held me up. All told, I spent around 5 hours to produce the above.  The machine itself is pretty quick, even with the superfluous stops and starts.  Take a look at a video of the Plasma cutter cutting the above.

While I was at TechShop, I also cut some vinyl to be used for the holder for the tank periscope.  Here it is, complete with transfer paper applied:

I got it to print properly the first time. Yay!  Spent about a half hour weeding it out, and for the most part had no issues.  Now I’m debating on whether to use it as a positive or a negative, and whether I want to etch or not with it. I could either use the vinyl itself as an acid resist, or I can use it as a stencil for some spray paint which would them become the positive.  I could also use that paint as an acid resist if I etch.

If I use thin copper, I can use the etchant as a cutting solution – if you leave it on a long time, it will essentially dissolve anything not masked, thus cutting out the letters.  This is a nice option for thin metal where the plasma cutter is overkill and sloppy.

I also have some questions in my head about how to best make the support itself. I don’t want to cover too much of the periscope as its metal is quite attractive.  Also, if I cut instead of etching, I’ll have to deal with stenciling issues.

Science!

No kvetching about etching

Some good news!  My copper etching experiment was a big success:

I created a bath out of corked PVC pipe that I bought at Building Resources today and kept the copper pipe in etching solution for two hours.  The etch is quite deep – deeper than I probably would want; two hours is too much.  A single coat of Montana Gold spray paint resisted the acid very well and came off very easily with Citrus Strip.  I plan on decorating all of the pipe I use for magnifying glass supports.

On that note, I once again stripped (har har) the copper pipes used for the Magritte piece and will try using car wax instead of varnish.  Supposedly it does a very good job while keeping the shine.  We’ll see. I’ve got a test application of wax drying now.

At Building Resources, I also purchased some more acrylic, both white and black, as well as some thick pieces of wood for the ShopBot CNC router, and some corrugated metal to make a Shanty Town sign with.  For those not in the know, “Shanty Town” is what we call the open space at the Art Explosion studios.  I spent some time installing various fonts and found a good sloppy one to make the sign with.  I touched it up a bit and now it’s ready to go.  I have the plasma cutter reserved on Thursday morning. Hopefully all will go well.  I’ll also be cutting the holders for the tank periscope and the gunsight, and hopefully will be able to etch them as well with the laser.

Another nice find was a side view mirror for my dinosaur piece.  I was lucky – thought I’d need to go to a car junk yard for that.

Barber Pole

Today I stripped off some varnish from my Magritte pipes using Citrus Strip, and reapplied a different one after polishing them up.  Unfortunately, I discovered that the varnish is quite a good solvent for latex, and my gloves dissolved into the finish, so I’ll probably have to restrip and revarnish.  Grrrr.

I also cleaned and prepped some pipe for etching tests.  I used some Montana Gold black acrylic spray paint on some decoratively masked pipe.  I’ll try soaking it in some etching acid tomorrow. This paint is supposedly easy to burn off with a laser, so I hope it works well.

Copper Shopper

It’s been a few days since my last post and I’m afraid I have no pretty images to share nor completed pieces, but I have figured several things:

I found a nice spray gloss that I can put over leafing and metal to keep them shiny – much better than the stuff I tried the first time. I have several leafed pieces that need sealing as well as the Magritte piece. I’ve also found out about (and purchased) a good spray paint that works as an acid resist.  I am planning on using it for engraving purposes – I can remove paint from metal and have acid etch the exposed parts.

I’ve decided to use copper pipes/tubing to attach magnifying glasses to frames. I’m quite pleased to have resolved how to integrate the glasses with what they are focusing on. Copper is easy to work with, looks fairly elegant, and will be easy to attach to the frames. I can also do decorative work on the copper – vinyl masking/sandblasting and etching. Metals, especially copper, are featuring heavily in this series – they and the magnifying glasses provide a common visual thread.

In other news: I’ve learned how to use a rotary attachment for the laser cutter that will let me engrave on round objects. Aside from the obvious use on glass, I can try it on the pipes too. Only difficulty is that copper tubing that is easy to bend comes in coils, and unless I can straighten it almost perfectly, I won’t be able to spin it. Regular half inch copper pipe will work fine, but I’ll have to figure out that scary pipe bending machine at TechShop. On the bright side, my magnifying glasses fit nicely in half-inch pipe.

I also tried etching tiny fonts on glass and figured out the correct settings on the laser. A 4pt font is quite easy to read at 100 speed/30 power.

My plasma cutter parts and my router bit have arrived, so I’m now able to do some fancy CNC wood and metal working. I need to visit the lumber yard – Home Depot’s selection isn’t good enough. I also went to Blick and purchased some copper foil for embossing, some ferric chloride for etching, and some airplane glue in case I need a quick vacation.

Ceci n’est pas un blog

Today I sanded down and restained a couple of frames, did some design work for some new frames (fingerprints and giraffes on their way!), and all but finished the “ceci n’est pas ceci n’est pas une pipe” piece.  I touched up the epoxy with some copper leafing pen to make it look all copper, and I spliced the top pipe and dropped a cross piece that has an elbow joined to an end cap.  I used transfer paper to print on a 4 point font.  To become clear the transfer paper needs an oil based varnish on top, and my pint sized jar of oil based varnish hardened up and died, so I used a drop of Damar varnish instead – it is oil based after all. It seems to work fine.

In the end, it’s a single continuous pipe, except for the magnifying glass.  I do like how the magnifying glass part looks like a question mark.

ceci n'est pas ceci n'est pas une pipe

Tomorrow I’ll be at TechShop.  I have some woodworking to do and have some time reserved on a laser cutter.  I’ll also do a bit more design work on their swanky computers and prepare something for the ShopBot CNC router so I’ll be ready to go once my nice carbide routing bit arrives.

I’ve also decided what do do with the “What would you enlarge?” piece: I’m going to make the frame out of a ruler or yardstick that I will miter cut and wrap around in a rectangle.  I was thinking of laser etching it, but it’s more fun if it’s the real thing repurposed, especially because the piece would be measuring itself.

Spam?

Aside from celebrating Rubyspam’s engagement, there was nothing too exciting yesterday, though I did order some plasma cutter consumable parts, which is interesting because until I joined TechShop, I didn’t know what a plasma cutter was.  I’ve also got a carbide router bit on the way for the ShopBot CNC wood router.

On the construction front, I drilled a hole in the pipe piece to mount the magnifying glass part.  I think in the end it looks fairly elegant.  Now I need to have a mount for what it’s focusing on.   My concern is it will look too busy no matter what I do.

Otherwise, I painted/stained and attached the backing cradles to pieces. One advantage of this blocking is that I can use it to attach the magnifying glass bracket so that the whole piece is a single object, as opposed to a having magnifying glass separately mounted.

On the one above, I tried outlining the letters in black, but it looked cheesy.

For the stained ones, I’ll need to sand them and reapply.  Where there were glue spots, the stain didn’t bind.  I needed to sand the edges anyway to make the sides uniform, so no no big deal.  That I’ll do at TechShop where they have a nice belt sander.

I also mastered a technique for making the blocks that doesn’t require corner clamps (The clamps I use, thanks to Scott, don’t work for small pieces).  What I do is apply glue to joint edges, press all 4 pieces together to form a rectangle.  Then, holding a corner tightly, I staple them on top. I repeat stapling all 4 corners.  Then I flip over and repeat. Once the glue dries, I remove the staples on top and glue on the top piece and clamp in it place or put something heavy on it.

Same Old Same Gold

Yesterday I bought a bunch of wood, mostly for framing purposes.  Also got some more gilding supplies for my wood-into-gold alchemy.

At the studio, I regilded the gas mask, both copper and cold.  I purposely kept the copper a little patchworky as I like the look.  Here’s the result for now – I’ll let it develop a slight patina over the next few days before sealing it.

Notice how the new filter on the bottom is all nice and clean compared to the old one.

Here’s another photo which I’m posting because of the cool way the lenses picked up the light:

As for the frames, I gilded the E’s using copper leaf and gold leafing pen.  The gold gets a bit lost, so I may switch to black, or maybe just outline it with black:

Also built 3 cradles, one for the E’s above, one for the Egyptian frame, and one for the speakers, shown below:

I’m thinking to use the wood on the cradle to attach a bracket to hold the magnifying glasses.

Last up, I used some plumber’s epoxy to seal the coil in place and cut it down to size. Below is roughly what it will look like.  I need to bore a hole into the end of a piece of end-cap pipe that I have to attach the glass in an elegant way.  That way it will all be one continuous pipe.  The glass is unfortunately not perfectly surrounded – you can see a tiny gap on top, but I don’t think it matters much.

Shiny things

Today I picked up a big piece of 18 gauge mild steel sheet from a steel yard in the city. (For the curious, “mild” means it’s low carbon, metallic, and not stainless.  It’s easy to weld, bend and etch but rusts like an old swingset, so it needs paint or powder coat. And for the really curious, 18 gauge means it’s 1/18th of an inch thick) I then then went to Building Resources (my happy place) because it was nearby and got a corrugated steel scrap and a 5 foot by 1 foot strip of what looks to be clear acrylic.  The mild steel is for the plasma cutter, the corrugated is to make a “Shanty Town” sign for the studio, and the plastic is for the laser cutter.  They’re all comingling in my car right now, and i’m hoping for some interesting offspring by morning.

On my way to the studio I stopped at Arch art supply which isn’t as good as Blick, but it’s close to the studio.  There I got some markers and Krylon Leafing Pens which aren’t cheap, but are absolutely fantastic.  While not quite as shiny as true leaf, they look exactly like antiqued leaf.  They’re much better than any metallic paint or marker I’ve ever tried.  The surface is uniform; there’s no powdery effect.

At the studio, I put another touchup gilding layer on the Ra piece, but was unsatisfied with the unevenness of it, so I applied a bit of the gilding pen and am quite happy with the result.  On a lark, I tried gilding a pastic-framed magnifying glass and the result is excellent:

Nice, huh?

I also received a replacement gasmask filter in the mail today and I worked on gilding it.  Result not great, but it’ll get there. I decided to touch up the copper mask as well and have some size ready to go tomorrow.  I may spend some time at Techshop too as I need to do some precise drilling and wood cutting.

Egyptian relic or elaborate hoax?

Today I tried gilding the Ra piece. First I painted the engraved parts black with some acrylic paint, and squeegied off the excess. Then I brushed on the size (a.k.a. glue) trying to avoid the engraved parts.  Then applied leaf.  A fair amount stuck to the engraved areas since glue inevitably got in there.  I cleaned them up a bit using a knife and a finishing nail (fits just right) and reapplied the leaf to many areas.  I then cleaned up the engraved areas again resulting in what you see below.  I used a black Sharpie to touch up some gold spots in the black. I have another pass to do before I think it’ll be spiffy looking – or at least look quite a bit like what I saw at the Egypt exhibit at the De Young Museum sometime back.

This took several hours of tedious work, so my only other achievement was cutting a few pieces of glass down to size for some frames with my newly purchased class cutter.