Alright, this is basically half of one of those Viking ships.
Not even quite half.
This is the platform, platform will be 16 feet, this is just 8 feet and then the front
of it will kind of come off the platform and like these like how they peak up on the ends
that will be right here so it will probably come out another three and a half or four
feet like right here and then they will just get bolted and ratcheted together there.
So once we get it over there we should be able to just take all the pieces out of the
truck and just ratchet it up and put the wheels on it.
This is only half of it, so this is about 12 feet, it will be another 12 feet but as
you can see it doesn't go, I don't have another 12 feet so that's it, I can go half at a time.
These are the prints that are going to go, these are going to go onto the sections, onto
the sides of the ship.
So I'll probably do like a row of black, a row of red, like all the way across and something
like that and then you know I got a bunch of other stuff that will get collaged on here.
This is more like a background but these are just little wave patterns that will go on
the side of the ship.
So I mean just to give you an idea, it will really get tricked out there like put patterns
all around the top and the bottom and there will be imagery on the side and kind of stuff
kind of shooting out everywhere.
This one is kind of funny, this guy has got these pet pigeons and he only eats one of
their legs because he likes eating pigeon legs but he keeps them as pets so he puts
a little wood peg on them.
These are all, it's a bunch of skulls, different kind of skulls, a wolf skull, skull of horns,
skull of feathers, some little wolves, some crows, I mean I usually pull like an addition
of prints from each block you know to have something to sell and like I said before the
cool thing about prints like it's not painting so I don't have to charge like a ton of money.
If I do like 20 of these and some for you know 50 bucks or 100 bucks a piece it's too
grand.
That will pay studio rent here for two months if I sold all of them.
Yes, about the difference between linoleum and wood, linoleum you can get a much more
fluid line and fluid cut and you can also get more detail.
There's no grain in linoleum so you can take it in any direction with a chisel.
When I'm teaching this what I'll tell these kids is like anything that's going to stay
black just go ahead and draw it black and then when you're carving it just stay the
hell away from it.
Some devils, more of those pig face guys, it's a devil eating a chicken, that's like
a Kessler block.
Like when you're drawing with a pencil or something you're drawing positive like these
are all going to be black marks or solid marks but with this everything you draw is going
to be a white mark so you have to keep that in mind.
I like using MDF like if I would just want to use like bold, like more bold lines.
This stuff is just like particle dust and glue basically.
This doesn't have any grain either so you can still get like a fluid line but it's usually
a little more bold than you can get with linoleum.
This is like a centipede and going through a skull.
That's it, there's some blocks.
