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Showing posts with label Big Screen Animation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Screen Animation. Show all posts

Monday, March 10, 2014

My Next Project--Plushy Squids!

Hey everybody! It's me, Momiji! Actually, it's not Momiji, it's me, Annie. But wouldn't it be great if I was able to have Momiji on board for this post? He is just so cute! 

Isn't he so adorable?
Anyway! It has been a long time since I have posted anything decent enough to call an actual post! I guess I haven't had much to say. Mike posted his goodbye post on Big Screen Animation and I guess I was just bummed out about that. He was pretty dang cool. But I think he does have a different blog so I will look into that!

So here we go! 

Recently, I have been HUGE into plushies. Any sorts of plushies. Felt plush, fleece plush, plushies with hand-made resin eyes! The list goes on! I am in the home stretch of finishing my Toothless plush, and I have to say, for the first thing I have made like that, it turned out pretty darn amazing! All I have left to do is the wings and the wing-flap prosthetic. Oh! I also have the eyes to make. Since this is a mock version (to see if I could actually do it) I am just going to make them out of felt. But he is just so cute so far without the wings and eyes!

Now, as I finish him up, I am looking for more tutorials and things. More PLUSH to make! I have a little 5in. Totoro felt on my list that I really want to make. I may also try to make my own plush patterns...But the thing I am into now is...PLUSH SQUIDS!!

I don't know why! They are just so cute! 

My favorite one that I have found so far is this one: 8-foot Giant Squid Pillow. Brought to you by Build-a-DIY on tumblr. :D

8-foot giant squid pillow.
You’ll need:
2 yards of felt
1 yard of patterned fabric (I suggest a polka dot-type pattern so it looks like suction cups)
1 medium piece of black felt, 1 medium piece of white felt (for the eyes)
white thread, black thread and thread of the same color as the felt you’re using
pins
about 5 lbs. of stuffing
a couple big sheets of paper to draw your pattern

You can find many of these things down at the many places on Fabric Row, on 4th Street between Bainbridge and Catherine. Pearl, at 417 South Street, sometimes has stuffing if you can’t find any.
First, you need to draw out your patterns. Here’s a basic template to get you started, although most of the measurements are reasonably fudgeable. If in the likely event you don’t have any four-foot-long pieces of paper lying around, just tape a few pieces together.

Once you’ve drawn out your eight patterns, it’s time to cut the fabric. Pin the pattern to the fabric, laid flat, and cut out the following, leaving a half an inch or so of extra fabric around the edge of the pattern:
FOR THE ARMS: 8 felt and 8 fabric cutouts of piece 1
FOR THE, UH, LONGER ARMS: 2 felt and 2 fabric cutouts of piece 2
FOR THE BODY: 2 felt cutouts of piece 3
FOR THE FIN: 4 felt cutouts of piece 4
FOR THE HEAD: 1 felt cutouts of piece 6
FOR THE EYES: 2 white felt cutouts of piece 7 and 2 black felt cutouts of piece 8
So now you’ve got all your pieces ready, it’s time to start sewing them together. I did mine by hand because my sewing machine is busted and I get a kind of Zen buzz from sewing by hand, but if you have a non-busted one I recommend that you use it as it will be MUCH EASIER. You’re going to be sewing everything with the nice side of the fabric facing in, then turning it inside out to stuff it.
THE ARMS: (To make a quilted pattern that looks like suckers, see this other post). Pin together one patterned fabric piece 1 and one felt piece 1 (with the nice sides facing the inside). Sew down around the U-shape and back up, leaving the top open. Then turn the arm inside out, stuff it (it’s easiest to do both of these things if you sort of scrunch it up like you’re trying to put on a pair of tights, excuse the non-dude-friendly reference) and sew the top closed. Do the same for the other seven arms and rejoice in the fact that this is the most tedious part. Same deal with the two long arms, they’re just harder to stuff. 
THE FINS: Pin together two of your piece 4s and sew together the curvy outer edge. Turn the piece inside out, so the seam you just sewed is on the inside, and start sewing up the other side, stuffing gradually as you go along. You should end up with a triangle-ish puffy thing. Repeat for the other two piece 4s.

THE BODY: Put down one piece 3, then place the two fins you have down with the point up and the curvy side pointing in, then make a sandwich by putting the other piece 3 down on top. Pin it all together and sew around the edges with the two fins still inside, as shown. Turn it inside out and move on to…

THE HEAD: So take piece 6 and the ten arms you’ve already done. Lay the arms, fabric side facing you, out with the arms’ top seams in a line half an inch from the top of piece 6. The order should be arm arm arm arm BIG ARM arm arm arm arm BIG ARM. The legs should be almost entirely covering piece 6. Pin them in place and sew a straight line through the individual legs seams to attach the legs to piece 6.
When you pick up the other side of piece 6, you now have something resembling a really weird untied hula skirt. Sew together the two 9-inch ends of piece 6 with the fabric side of the arms on the outside, and keep it inside out for the moment.
PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER: Fit the open end of the body through the arms (still fabric side facing out) and pull the edge all the way through the felt cylinder so it’s even with the edge that DOESN’T have arms attached to it. Sew around the diameters of the head cylinder and the body cylinder to attach them, then pull the legs down over the head and you’re almost done!
Stuff the body, then seal it off by sewing piece 5 over the open end (even if you do have a functional sewing machine, you’ll probably have to do this part by hand).
THE EYES: Sew the black circles on the white circles and whipstitch the eyes onto the head. You do this last because you can’t tell where they’re going to end up on the end product if you put them on before stuffing the body.
It is so big! It's so cute!
Now, they use felt when making this, but I think I may try to use fleece. Fleece is probably just as easy to work with as felt is. Though, I haven't worked with felt enough to know the difference. I need about 2 yards of felt or fleece for this "little" guy. Hehe. 

Here are the instructions!


8-foot giant squid pillow.

You’ll need:
2 yards of felt
1 yard of patterned fabric (I suggest a polka dot-type pattern so it looks like suction cups)
1 medium piece of black felt, 1 medium piece of white felt (for the eyes)
white thread, black thread and thread of the same color as the felt you’re using
pins
about 5 lbs. of stuffing
a couple big sheets of paper to draw your pattern

You can find many of these things down at the many places on Fabric Row, on 4th Street between Bainbridge and Catherine. Pearl, at 417 South Street, sometimes has stuffing if you can’t find any.

First, you need to draw out your patterns. Here’s a basic template to get you started, although most of the measurements are reasonably fudgeable. If in the likely event you don’t have any four-foot-long pieces of paper lying around, just tape a few pieces together.


Once you’ve drawn out your eight patterns, it’s time to cut the fabric. Pin the pattern to the fabric, laid flat, and cut out the following, leaving a half an inch or so of extra fabric around the edge of the pattern:

FOR THE ARMS: 8 felt and 8 fabric cutouts of piece 1

FOR THE, UH, LONGER ARMS: 2 felt and 2 fabric cutouts of piece 2

FOR THE BODY: 2 felt cutouts of piece 3

FOR THE FIN: 4 felt cutouts of piece 4

FOR THE HEAD: 1 felt cutouts of piece 6

FOR THE EYES: 2 white felt cutouts of piece 7 and 2 black felt cutouts of piece 8

So now you’ve got all your pieces ready, it’s time to start sewing them together. I did mine by hand because my sewing machine is busted and I get a kind of Zen buzz from sewing by hand, but if you have a non-busted one I recommend that you use it as it will be MUCH EASIER. You’re going to be sewing everything with the nice side of the fabric facing in, then turning it inside out to stuff it.

THE ARMS: (To make a quilted pattern that looks like suckers, see this other post). Pin together one patterned fabric piece 1 and one felt piece 1 (with the nice sides facing the inside). Sew down around the U-shape and back up, leaving the top open. Then turn the arm inside out, stuff it (it’s easiest to do both of these things if you sort of scrunch it up like you’re trying to put on a pair of tights, excuse the non-dude-friendly reference) and sew the top closed. Do the same for the other seven arms and rejoice in the fact that this is the most tedious part. Same deal with the two long arms, they’re just harder to stuff.

THE FINS: Pin together two of your piece 4s and sew together the curvy outer edge. Turn the piece inside out, so the seam you just sewed is on the inside, and start sewing up the other side, stuffing gradually as you go along. You should end up with a triangle-ish puffy thing. Repeat for the other two piece 4s.

THE BODY: Put down one piece 3, then place the two fins you have down with the point up and the curvy side pointing in, then make a sandwich by putting the other piece 3 down on top. Pin it all together and sew around the edges with the two fins still inside, as shown. Turn it inside out and move on to…


THE HEAD: So take piece 6 and the ten arms you’ve already done. Lay the arms, fabric side facing you, out with the arms’ top seams in a line half an inch from the top of piece 6. The order should be arm arm arm arm BIG ARM arm arm arm arm BIG ARM. The legs should be almost entirely covering piece 6. Pin them in place and sew a straight line through the individual legs seams to attach the legs to piece 6.

When you pick up the other side of piece 6, you now have something resembling a really weird untied hula skirt. Sew together the two 9-inch ends of piece 6 with the fabric side of the arms on the outside, and keep it inside out for the moment.

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER: Fit the open end of the body through the arms (still fabric side facing out) and pull the edge all the way through the felt cylinder so it’s even with the edge that DOESN’T have arms attached to it. Sew around the diameters of the head cylinder and the body cylinder to attach them, then pull the legs down over the head and you’re almost done!

Stuff the body, then seal it off by sewing piece 5 over the open end (even if you do have a functional sewing machine, you’ll probably have to do this part by hand).

THE EYES: Sew the black circles on the white circles and whipstitch the eyes onto the head. You do this last because you can’t tell where they’re going to end up on the end product if you put them on before stuffing the body.

And that concludes the instructions! There are so many other adorable octopuses and squid plush that I won't ever be able to post them all! I will post pics of Toothless when I finish him up!!

Anne ♥




Thursday, April 11, 2013

Apparently it is Thursday ^.^

Okkaayyyy, so I should be looking for a topic to do my Research Paper on...but I thought, I'll just take a second to blog. (Don't tell anyone, it's a secret! ~wink~)

 Anyway, I've bit a bit confused with my week as you could tell by the post title. I thought it was Tuesday or something...My computer has troubles changing the dates and times so that it constantly messing up...I don't know why it does that, but it has since I bought it. Curious.

 There is this blog I follow called "Clueless Freshman." It's probably--no--it is my favorite blog that I am currently following. I do enjoy "Big Screen Animation" though. I am such an animation freak...Anyway, back to the topic. She posts the most fantastical pictures! (Some are just plain hilarious...Like this one--I laughed so hard at it, for some reason. Heh. I still am.)

It's not my work, but I found it on her blog. Hehe. Love it. Had to share.

 A lot of them are from things like Lord of The Rings and The Hobbit...(Which I watched on Sunday and LOVED the heck out of it...more to come on that I believe ^.^) Some are Harry Potter and the like. I read it all the time. So here, if you wanna check it out, is the link. I hope she doesn't mind that I mentioned it. I think she'd like to know that I love her blog. Heh.

 Then there is the problem of other funny things that my sister sends to me...

Like this:

I laughed ridiculously hard at this one. I guess its that funny or I am easy to make laugh. LOL
This one only makes sense if you know who Uther is...He is Arthur's dad--the king--on BBC's Merlin.  A show I have mentioned...lots and lots of times...But it's not on the telly anymore...not until May...When SYFY announced that it wouldn't be back till May and "you are now watching Robot Combat League," I basically died. My sister fell from the chair and looked like this:

'Nuff said. We weren't happy that day..Two months ago..
Alright, I gotta go, I still haven't found a topic...Wish me luck!

Heh.
~natsu

Sunday, February 26, 2012

BRAVE

I just saw the special look for Disney/Pixar's 'BRAVE' on ABCFamily. I have to say, it looks unreal. Like it can't be Pixar's Film....I have seen a lot of comments on BIG SCREEN ANIMATION (Blog)  and yeah, it does kinda look like a Dreamworks Film. I still can't wait to see it. IT LOOKS AMAZING!!!!

Here is the poster from a post on that blog. Again, totally amazing! And Merida is beautiful ;)


(I hope that I have used BigscreenAnimation properly. I don't want to get in trouble. Thanks.)

~NATSU