Saturday, December 22, 2012

Tribbles at Christmastime

So we opened Christmas presents early this year. My sister's a big Trekkie, so I decided to make her a bunch of tribbles. Using patterns I found online, I made eight furry tribbles of different sizes. 


Then I had this awesome idea. I stuck one tribble in a shoebox with a tupperware full of rice. I then cut a slice in the container and scattered some rice around. 


Then I wrote this letter (click for larger picture):


 and stuck it on the top.




Then after she'd opened it up, I waited until she was looking the other way and dropped a second tribble next to the first. Over the next hour I added a tribble or two whenever she was distracted, so that they seemed to multiply! She thought it was great and laughed her head off!



Night Sky

Something I whipped up quick in 10 or 15 minutes on CorelDraw. Original, no reference.


Friday, November 23, 2012

How To Make a Caramel-Filled Chocolate TARDIS

For the 49th Anniversary of "Doctor Who", I made myself a caramel-filled chocolate TARDIS. Here's how I did it. First off you'll need a mold. I already had one that I'd made the previous year, but here's the gist of it: Choose the design of your TARDIS, and lay it out on the computer in layers inversely, print it off, trace the shapes on cardboard, and cut them out. My TARDIS's about 10 or 11 inches high. The mold itself will take several days' time to do, and cutting cardboard is not pretty. At any rate, glue it all together and you should get something like this:

I made a chocolate TARDIS last year for my sister for Christmas, so I'd already made my mold. One of the problems I'd had last year was getting the hardened chocolate out of the mold. On closer inspection, the vertical edges of the mold were ) shaped, which caused the chocolate to crack and resist leaving the mold. To try to fix this, I cut and taped pieces of paper down and around, so that I could smooth out the edges without permanently altering my mold. 


Last year I'd lined the mold with plastic wrap; the plastic tore easily and wanted to hug the chocolate more than the mold. This time I used press-n-seal plastic wrap/cling wrap. With the slightly sticky side down, it stayed in the mold where I wanted it.



I used a bone folder (tool pictured below) to work the plastic into the edges and corners, trying to smooth out the wrinkles as best I could, and hoping that any that showed up in the final chocolate would simply look like wood grain. Fingernails or the smooth edge of a plastic ruler or such would substitute well for the bone folder.


For the chocolate I used 14 oz. of Hersey's chocolate, or the equivalent of two giant Hersey's bars. For the caramel I was initially going to use hard caramel squares; however, this proved problematic (more on that later). Instead I used ice cream topping. We didn't have any caramel on hand at the time, since it was a short-notice change, so I used butterscotch instead.



I melted the chocolate in the microwave, then used a carefully cleaned paint brush to paint the entire mold with melted chocolate. Make sure this layer is thick and you can't see the mold through it.






Freeze it.



This is what happens when you use hard caramels. After microwaving it to a burned liquid, it hardened rapidly and then turned into a nasty rock, not suitable for pouring or putting in a chocolate bar.


Take the ice cream topper caramel and squirt it into a square in the center of the TARDIS, however much you want in it. Freezing it won't cause the liquid caramel to solidify, so melt the rest of your chocolate and pour it over, bringing the chocolate up to the edge of the mold and smoothing it out. Freeze.



Now it's time to prize the chocolate from the mold. This is tricky, and you need to make sure the chocolate is fully frozen first. I got mine out with a combination of banging, shouting, and prying. I pulled the paper out from the edges of the mold to give the chocolate more wiggle room to work out. The light snapped off the top of mine, and then it cracked horizontally. :-( If you want to, you can melt a bit more chocolate and try to "glue" the pieces back together, or melt some white chocolate and do detail work: write "Police Box" on the top, shade in the light, etc. 



It's not the best TARDIS in the world, and a bit battered-looking (the time vortex is a hostile place), but it's full of caramelly goodness. The mold lived to make TARDISes another day!


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Starfruit

A picture of starfruit that I made yesterday, using graphic design techniques. Original on bottom.



Adobe Backgrounds

Just a couple really quick backgrounds I made in Photoshop a bit ago. Nothing terribly spectacular.





Time Lord BBC Advertisement

Found this online when I was looking for ads for a project of mine. Just thought it was hilarious. :-)
(It's on the Tube)


If you were a Time Lord, you would be home by now, or 700 years ago.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Adric's Star

Hello! Here's a pic I just finished in CorelDraw PhotoPaint. It's Adric's star. Adric was the Fifth Doctor's companion, and also one of the few companions to die (permanently) during the show's run. 

To explain the significance of the star, it was a badge that Adric wore that he had received in recognition of mathematical excellence. In "Earthshock" the Doctor and co. faced the Cybermen, whose weakness was gold. Adric's star was made of gold, so he gave it to the Doctor. The Doctor crushed the star while defeating the Cybermen and the day was saved, leaving the Doctor and co. (minus Adric) in the TARDIS. Adric had remained on board the spaceship (where the episode largely took place) trying to crack the Cybermen's code. The Doctor then planned on rescuing Adric from the spaceship, which was hurtling towards prehistoric Earth, but the TARDIS controls had been damaged and he was not able to dematerialize. The spaceship crashes into Earth and becomes the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs. The credits roll silently, with Adric's broken star as the backdrop.

^^if that doesn't make much sense, you can always read the Wikipedia article here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthshock#Plot


And here's the reference photo:


Hope you like and RIP Adric!

Thursday, October 18, 2012

DW Weeping Angel Drawing

Here's the aforementioned Weeping Angel picture I drew (pencil) last year, but had trouble finding a suitable picture to upload. And yes, yes, I know 'the image of an angel is an angel' and drawing one is possibly the stupidest thing a Whovian could do, but it hasn't gotten me yet!



...and don't blink.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Doctor Who Wallpapers

I came up with a whole new selection of Doctor Who wallpapers for my desktop...here's two that I had to tweak a little to fit on my screen.


Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Angels take Manhattan WIP

Alright, so as an encore to my previous Angel piece (which I need to get a good picture of first, then I'll post- sorry), I've started on a watercolor of the below picture, from Doctor Who's "The Angels Take Manhattan" finale. It's a cemetery with the New York skyline in the back and a nice angel in the foreground. I took the liberties of lightening the picture, if anyone was wondering. 
I've just started and it'll take me a while to sketch everything out and I've got a restricted schedule, so it might be a while, but I'll keep you all posted!


Monday, October 15, 2012

Companions' Departures on Doctor Who

With "The Angels Take Manhattan" in mind, I made up this pie chart showing how companions have left the Doctor's care. I included companions from the classic and new series, and categorized them as best I could, using their final departures as their method of departure, ignoring any return visits. But more of that later.


Obviously this is going to vary slightly depending on how the companions are categorized, what constitutes a "companion," etc, etc, etc. This is the best I can figure, though. At worst it's a vaguely correct representation of percentages. :-)

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Cypher Book

We came across this mysterious book at a library sale not too long ago. We can't figure out what it is and it irritates me to death. Please comment if you know what it is or have any idea at all! It's got a dark cover, typical trade paperback size. Inside the front cover is a handwritten number- 01639 - and "Hugo Antl.", as far as we can figure. There's no title page of any sort, copyright or title or anything. Inside there's a page number along the top, and then the numbers 1 through 30 going down the side. Then there're cryptic initials of some kind (W.M., S.D., J.D., T., etc.) There there appears to be some sort of dialogue, using a mix of capital and lowercase letters, with no spaces of any sort. Some lines end with question marks or periods, some with nothing. Some include parentheses, some dashes. I figure it's for an English-speaking entity, since there are occasional (See Code) in the middle of the text. Also, at the end there's an index at the end with the headings at the beginning of every section listed with their page numbers. Note that "index" is written in English. Page 52 is earmarked.
Are the letters code, or abbreviations? Is it a court proceeding or a military interrogation? 
What do the cryptic numbers on the first page mean? Is it a serial number? The number of books printed? A date?
Who or what or where is Hugo Antl.? "Antl" is followed by a period, so is it an abbreviation? A name with a simple dot added out of habit?







I couldn't find anything on Google about code books, and tried many types of simple coding techniques to decipher the writing, but no luck! Focusing on the number and name(?) written on the inside page, I determined that 01639 is the area for Neath in the U.K., and there's a town called Hugo in Oklahoma that's just southeast of another town called Antlers.


Any ideas?



Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Doctor Who Beach Painting

This is another painting I did last year. Done in acrylic and reference. It's the beach from the beginning of Doctor Who season 6, "The Impossible Astronaut," and it also appeared in the finale, "The Wedding of River Song." Below are two detailed pieces.