Concrete Statue Beaver - Part 1 - Duplicating Statue with a Latex Rubber Mold
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 8 มี.ค. 2024
- Watching how to duplicate and make a garden statue mold will teach you the steps to this amazing project. Concrete garden statues and other art, whether animals, gnomes, or other figurines, enhances the garden, patio, or yard, it lasts forever, and it also makes an ideal gift. This video will guide you through the process of making a rubber mold for concrete statues and other art forms. You will be taught tips and methods of applying liquid latex rubber to a cast for a statue.
This is a 2-part video, guiding you from start to finish on duplicating a statue. The first walks through the preparation and latex mold process, with the second part showing how to make the fiberglass mother mold with the end result of a beautiful garden statue.
Andy highly recommends looking at the 3-part series from his video library for how to deal with seams and other challenges, too
Backyard Adventures with Andy Wright is a channel devoted to all-thing gardening and yard care, along with random "adventures" that include statue making, smoking meat and pizza oven fun, home entertainment tips, and more. Tune-in for some inspiration and instruction on all things home and yard!
Focus Questions: How to make a latex rubber mold of a concrete beaver statues? - แนวปฏิบัติและการใช้ชีวิต
Awesome
Thanks for watching! The mold actually turned out really easy for me to make statues, and I am glad there were no seams in this one.
I paint statues for a man who owns a statuary business here. He's told me about making molds but never knew how he does it so now I know. Thanks for the video.
Thanks for sharing. I do a little painting with my gnomes and some other statues, but most of my "painting" is dry-brushing to give my outdoor statues an aged look.
Great video looking forward to # 2
Thanks, and I have the next one ready and posting tomorrow morning. My second beaver statue is curing, and I had one mistake that will come up in the 2nd video, as I tried something different, but overall, you shall see...
Hi. I make my own sculptures. My most recent is an angel. She is a pretty complex piece with a flowing gown and large wings, and I'm not sure how to make the mold. Have you ever had experience with something like that, and do you have a place where I could possibly send you photos of the project for advice?
My email should be posted on my channel site, so feel free to send me a message. I don't know if I can help, but I'll tell you what I know!
I have a huge, air pocket, between my statue and Latex Help
How big is it and how much gap between the statue seems to be there. I usually keep painting over smaller areas that lift and ignore it, as it never seems noticeable. Tell me more...
I have a resin mickey mouse birdbath that I wanted to make a mold and cast for concrete would it be the same process?
Yes, it can be. You might be able to cast it in two parts that assemble together.
Hi could I ask is natural latex or prevulcanised better for casting?
I am not sure if it is prevulcanised, but I suspect it is. I don't know the science behind it and the formula they use...Sorry!
Do you use mold release agent before applying first latex coat? If no, why?
Good question...I never have used a mold release before the first layer of latex, and my experience has always been that the latex rubber comes right off the item. My reasoning is two-part. First, I am concerned about any sort of chemical reaction or damage that could affect the latex, and second, once I have had success, I figure why change. The one area that I have had challenges with my latex is on porous plywood, but it still came off with a little more care. What has your experience been?
@@backyardadventureswithandy
I started doing some silicone molds and used release agent but for some reason I damaged a few of molds. Then I changed doing mold using latex and still applied release agent before first applying. Item comes off very well so I started doing it on regular basis.
You have a good point, as most of the things I duplicate have a seal or coating over it that makes it less porous. Some are plastic or porcelain, so those also release well. I could imagine an unfinished concrete benefitting from the mold release.
About how many latex molds can you make with the gallon of latex?
It really depends on the surface area and size of the statues. I tend to get 2-4 per gallon. The beaver took about 1/3 of a gallon, for reference.
Where do you get your latex?
The latest gallon was purchased from Amazon.com, and before that, I bought it from TAP Plastics.