Monitor Lizard
Design by Kris Richards
|
|
Materials:
- Sculpey Glow
clays:
- Green-
1/16 block
- White-
¼ block plus 1/16 block
- Blue-
¼ block plus 1/16 block
- Yellow-
¼ block plus 1/16 block
- Sculpey III
clays:
- Black-small
pea-sized ball
- White-two
large pea-sized balls
- Lavender-1/16
block
- Dusty
rose- 1/8 block
- Yellow-
a pea-sized ball
- Needle tool
or toothpick
- Oven set to
bake reliably at 265 degrees
- Old baking
pan
- Clean work
area
- Fun-Tac or
raw clay- ¼ oz.
Instructions:
|
We
will use Sculpey III, and Glow in the dark Sculpey polymer clay for
this project. It helps to divide your clay up beforehand as shown.
|
To
make the yellow glow in the dark a brighter yellow, mix a pea-sized
ball of yellow Sculpey III to the 1/16 piece of yellow glow clay.
|
Gather-up
the lavender, green, pink, blue and yellow clay you just mixed.
|
Roll
all into equal-sized smooth balls.
|
Roll
the balls into long equal-sized tubes.
|
Condition
the rest of the clay pieces.
|
Shape
the clay into balls and tubes as shown
|
Roll
the large white ball into a fat snake. |
Flatten
the snake slightly.
|
Drape
the rainbow tubes over the flattened snake. Press slightly to adhere
the tubes to the body. Use a potter's rib or a kitchen knife to cut
the tubes.
|
Continue
to drape the tubes...
|
...down
the length of the body, trimming as you go. You may have some clay
left over. You can re-use this later-on.
|
Use
the needle tool or
toothpick to draw lines
in the tubes as shown.
|
Try
to space the lines evenly |
Shape
the large pink ball into a rounded "Hershey's Kiss" shape.
|
Flatten
it slightly.
|
Press
it to the flat end of the lizard's body.
|
Pinch
four equal-sized pieces off the large blue ball. Roll them into smooth
balls.
|
Shape
each into a tube. Press them all flat.
|
Curve
two to the right and two to the left.
|
Press
them on to the lizard's belly. Make sure they are pressed on well,
but be careful not to squish the rainbow tubes on the other side.
|
Press
two toe lines in the end of each foot with the needle tool.
|
Press
squares in each leg.
|
Pinch
off a tiny bit of white from one of the remaining balls. Press the two
large white balls of clay on to the lizard's head. |
|
Flatten
the two small black balls and press them in to the whites.
|
Press
the blue tube near the back of the eyes and the black to the front.
Use the needle tool to press a dip in between them.
|
Roll
the small bit of white into a very thin tube. Use the needle tool
to cut the ends off. Roll them into two very tiny flat balls, press
to the black to make sparkles.
|
Use
some of the left over blue to make two flat balls for nostrils. Press
them on the end of the nose, and use the needle tool to press a hole
in the center of each.
|
Bake
the lizard at 265 degrees for 30 minutes on an old baking pan.
|
KIDS:
Have an adult help you with this step!
|
If
you have enough clay, make a buddy for your lizard. You may want to
make his stripes in a different color order.
|

Use
some Fun Tac or some raw clay on the lizard's bellies to mount them
on the monitor. You can put them crawling up or down the side.
|
or
down the edge.
|
.
or put them on the top!
|
|
OTHER IDEAS
FOR THE LIZARD:
- Drill a small
hole in the end of the tail before baking. After baking, add a key
ring, and use him as a book bag buddy or zipper pull.
- Glue a magnet
strip to the back and put the lizard on the fridge, the range hood
over the oven, or on any metal surface!
- NOTE:
don't use the "pre glued" magnet strips, the glue doesn't work with
the clay. KIDS: Get an adult to help you, and use super glue to
mount the magnet.
|