Polaroid Photo

Wed
3
Sep '08

Hair of the spaniel

Package o hair This is my least favorite part of the process. It is the very definition of the word tedious. It’s so dull, I don’t even want to write a post about it, but here I go.

Because the dog is supposed to be a springer spaniel, it calls for two colors of fur, each of which comes in different lengths and textures. After looking for the right material, I finally settled on goat fur for the white and human hair wig for the black. The hair comes in packages like this and has a wave to it.

The hair unpacked Each section looks like this when unpacked and is about three feet long.

Brown fur on neck You can see how I have to place each line of brown fur. I’ll admit that I started out sewing this on, which is the right way, and after awhile realized that a) it would take me forever and b) the dog wasn’t going to do enough movement on stage for me to worry about stability. So I glued the rest of it.

Brown fur installed Here she is with most of the brown fur installed.

White and bown furThe white fur went faster, since it was basically goat hide and so I could do it in large pieces.

Starting to trimThis is the dog with untrimmed fur.

Trimming the dog Here’s where I’ve begun trimming and all that fur on the floor is what I’ve cut off. The biggest challenge here is to make it look like it’s naturally short, rather than trimmed. You know the difference, right? I mean, when you see a short haired dog you can tell when it’s naturally that way versus one that’s obviously been to the groomers. The way I do that is by using a straight razor instead of sheers. It lets me trim the fur with a little less regularity and gives it a more natural look.

Dog with fur installed And here she is with ears and mostly trimmed. After I took this, I went back and trimmed her legs to create the fetlocked appearance of a springer spaniel, but you get the idea.

Wed
3
Sep '08

Scientists use particle accelerator to date wine

See… this is the problem with writing science-fiction today is that just about anything I can come up with is already being done.

French scientists have devised a way of using particle accelerators to authenticate vintage wines, one of France’s top research bodies said this week.

The new method tests the age of the glass in wine bottles by analysing X-rays emitted when the bottles are placed under ion beams produced by a particle accelerator, the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) said in a statement.

“This enables the age of bottles and their origin to be verified and thus a vintage to be authenticated, a bit like the signature of a painter on a masterpiece, all without opening the bottle and without affecting in any way the content,” it said.