This one's been one helluva ride. The year started off slow with me tinkering on a handful of projects and generally going nowhere in life. I suppose there are those who would call it "comfortable," but for me it feels more like "stagnant."
Somewhere in January I was invited to take a tour of Rancho Obi-Wan, where Steve Sansweet has on display his record-setting collection of Star Wars memorabilia:
Life started to pick up speed sometime in February when I was invited to bring a handful of characters to the Petaluma Hobby Expo. This meant that I got to scramble to put together a few suits of Imperial Guard armor to escort my Space Marines around at the event:
I also decided that I had to make one more much more elaborate suit of Space Marine armor:
Between late February and early March, I ended up making a couple more Halo Spartans:
About the same week that they were finished up, I met up with my sister and a few of her friends for dinner. One of her friends brought along a stunningly gorgeous leggy blonde woman who I'd never met before. She was the kind of beautiful that made me instantly sad because, in my mind, there was no way we'd ever have anything in common. Her name was Shawnon. In just under six weeks, she was leaving the country to study veterinary medicine overseas.
Somehow we struck up a conversation and it turns out that she's a huge video game and science fiction nerd who makes a lot of her own very high quality costume replicas. I'm not sure how I managed it, but somehow I got her to go out with me on some really geeky dates. Here we are at Facebook headquarters:
When she mentioned she'd like to help out in the workshop from time to time, I was dubious. When she actually showed up and did it, I knew I was in love:
Shortly after that, I was asked to give a quick presentation to a local group called "Young Makers." This was an opportunity to show some teenagers what's possible with a little bit of determination and effort. Here's one of the many pics from my talk:
Shortly after that, Shawnon flew off to a tropical island to start learning how to fix broken dogs and cats. That's when I finally began my much-delayed preparations for my third annual appearance at the Bay Area Maker Faire:
Unlike last year, I really didn't have anything new to show off. My various projects still got plenty of attention:
And all of them got plenty of chance to shine:
One week later I was underway with the Sea Scout Ship Compass Rose on the way to the Ancient Mariners Regatta:
Once again I served as the chief judge for flotilla drill, which means I spent a whole weekend watching high school kids perform precision rowing:
June saw me serving as a presenter for the first Quartermaster Award ceremony that the Petaluma Sea Scouts have had in over fifteen years. Quartermaster is the Sea Scouts' equivalent to the Boy Scouts rank of Eagle Scout, but it's much more rare for anyone to actually attain it. Monica, the recipient, has quite a lot to be proud of:
I spent the second half of June doing my annual training with the Naval Reserve. It was two weeks worth of tedious office chores for the most part, but I did get a little bit of down time. I spent it as far down as I could manage:
While all of this was going on, my Combat Garden Gnome sales continued to grow. I'd been increasing production steadily and even hired additional help in order to keep up with the demand:
Over the course of the year I also sculpted three new poses. The first was the Bayonet Attack Gnome:
Then the Mortar Launcher Gnome:
And the Radio Gnome:
By the time August rolled around, things were going great with Shawnon. I went ahead and booked a flight out to St. Kitts to spend a few weeks vacationing with her during one of her breaks:
We managed to get out and about all over the little island:
and make new friends:
When I got back to the States, I knuckled down and got to work on a couple of projects I'd been making progress on all summer. First, I finished the installation of some signs that I'd made custom for "Fundemonium" a local toy store:
In all, I ended up making ten of them:
While
that was going on, I also made the upper half of a practical robot
costume for a short film entitled "GA6E." Here I am on location getting
the actor suited up:
The
plan was to have me make the head and put the actor in a skintight suit
so they could add the rest of the robot in postproduction. Apparently I
managed to make it fast enough to get them to re-evaluate and decide to
go with a complete practical suit instead. It was a mad scramble right
up to the last second, then I handed the top half of the suit off to
Fonco Creative Services so they could make the legs and paint the whole
thing. The day before shooting began, I stopped in at Fonco to see how it had shaped up and ended up pulling an all-nighter helping the crew finish up the last bits of fabrication and painting. In the end GA6E looked pretty good:
It looks real because it is real.
After some amazing on-location filming for GA6E, I got back to the workshop and dove into the final assembly and finish work for the Ironman suit I'd been working on. Here's a shot of all of the separately cast parts:
At some point I counted the pieces and came up with something like 150
separately cast parts. Each of those pieces had to be prototyped,
prepped, molded, cast, trimmed, primed, painted, and clearcoated:
I had the whole thing assembled about a week and a half before Halloween:
After a pretty low-key Halloween and Thanksgiving, things took a bit of a downturn. My dog Kira, who I've had ever since she was twelve weeks old, suddenly lost the use of her hind legs. After a very difficult week of hoping that steroid treatments might be able to have some effect, I finally had to have her put down. She was a pretty cool dog:
A week later, Shawnon came home for her holiday break and we set to running around getting her all caught up on family and friends time. Along the way we stole a Christmas tree, drove all over Sonoma County and down to Los Angeles. We ended the year at Disneyland:
So it's been quite a rollercoaster of a year. The highs keep getting higher and the lows keep getting lower, but I'm very much excited about the things I've got to look forward to in 2014:
I hope you have a happy new year in 2014. Stay tuned for more and more fascinating things to come...
Happy new year!
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry to hear about your dog though, I lost mine too in November.
I really enjoy reading your blog! I'm looking forwards to seeing what you do in 2014!
Cheers.
Great update! You'll have a great 2014!
ReplyDeleteYou need to marry that girl...
ReplyDelete