There are always certain elements of a prop that sell the
finished look such as the eyes, the hands, the teeth or in most cases a
combination of various elements. The last few weeks I have created a number of
zombie heads and the one element that helps to sell the look of these new props is the skin, or more
precisely the texture of the undead flesh. This summer I’m offering a number of
workshops where participants will build a severed zombie head from scratch. The
workshop in intensive, 12 hours of classes spread over four nights each three
hours long. During the third session we spend the time applying zombie skin
using a variety of commonly found materials. Each material used for the rotting
skin may not seem very convincing in its natural state but after being
incorporated into the papier mache sculpture it produces a unique texture which
after being painted and dry brushed will sell the concept of rotting zombie
flesh. Some of the materials used to design zombie skin are:
-Paper Towels
-Shop Towels (heavy blue paper towels)
-Toilet tissue or Facial tissue
-Coffee filters
- Crept paper
-Plastic grocery bags
-Paper clay manipulated to look like raw flesh
Paper Towels soaked in papier mache paste then manipulated with a brush. |
Plastic grocery bag after being heated with a heat gun. |
Paper towel coated in papier mache paste with strands of unraveled twine. |
Combination of toilet tissue and paper towels soaked in papier mache. |
Paper towels soaked in papier mache paste. |
Paper towels manipulated to look like tendons. |
Paper Towels soaked in papier mache paste. |
Each material yields a slightly different look and when
combined work well to create a zombie head with convincing rotting flesh
detail.
4 comments:
This awesome!!!, i would like to know how to characterize a child of zombie for haloween, congratulations
This awesome!!!, i would like to know how to characterize a child of zombie for haloween, congratulations
These are wonderful examples of effects created with various materials. I just really want to see the whole thing now!
Great post! Although latex has its place it's nice to see that impressive textures can be achieved with simpler less expensive materials. I'm definitely going to give a few of these a try.
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