Turning a Wine Glass Into a Pirate Goblet
by Nikita Maree in Craft > Clay
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Turning a Wine Glass Into a Pirate Goblet
How to turn a red wine glass into a
medieval gothic style pirate goblet.
Supplies
- Wine Glass
- Polymer Clay
- Sculpting Tools + Blades
- Oven
- Acrylic Paint + Paint Brushes
- Caffeine
- PVA Glue + Gems
- LED's + Tulle
Research and Reference
Firstly research.
I wanted to wrap my head around some
of the basic shapes in the hand.
I used the kids science book.
'100 Things to Know About Science'
by USBORNE books.
I also found a great picture from the
Merriam Webster Visual Dictionary
that had all the different hand bones.
Skeleton Hand
I mixed white and beige polymer clay
to create a bone color.
Then used 'Bake & Bond'
on the stem of the glass.
Wrapped the stem in clay.
Blended and smoothed with my fingers.
Holding a ball helped me to see how my wrist
and fingers reacted in this position.
I worked on a few of the lower wrist bones
and then added in the second forearm bone.
Added some grooves with a ball tool.
Then smoothed the surface
with baby oil on a paint brush.
Sizing and shaping up
some of the Carpal bones.
Blend and smooth in the Carpal bones.
For the hand bones.
Roll out a length, thicker on either end.
Detail with a ball tool.
Then lay the hand bones into position.
Leather Wraps
Creating the leather wraps around the hand.
I have a full in depth Instructable on
making polymer clay look like leather.
Cut two thinner strips of leather, one with a join.
Thin lengths of clay for the stitching.
For the rope around the hand.
Roll out two lengths.
And texture with a needle tool.
Twist the two textured lengths
around each other, to create the rope.
Medieval Goblet
Moving onto the top rim of the glass.
I spent some time
coming up with a design that I liked.
Textured the rim of the glass
with scrunched up foil.
Press out some squares
and cut them diagonally
to create triangles.
Place them around the rim.
Ball tool in the center of the triangles.
And dotting tool along the upper edges.
Add in a straight line at the base of each triangle.
Twist two lengths together
and cut diagonally to create a neat join.
I added the twisted ring to the top of the glass.
Then decided I didn't like it.
But . . . now looking at it,
I wish I had of kept it.
Skeleton Finger Bones
Roll out a set of finger bones.
These are sculpted in the same manner
as the hand bones.
Only they are shorter in length.
Everything was starting to come away from the glass.
And it all went down hill from here.
I wrapped some fabric around the glass to keep it all in place.
Hmmm
This is a visual representation
of how I was feeling.
Pirate Rings
Added the rings to the fingers,
then attached the finger bones to the rim of the glass.
I have a full in depth Instructable
on creating the rings that I used for this project.
Problems
The glass flipped, face down in the oven.
Melted, squished and burnt everything.
I was devastated and weeks of work ruined.
I knew if I didn't get straight back into sculpting
that I would never come back to this project.
Try Again
I repaired the rings and tore off most of the leather.
And repaired the rope.
I re-baked everything,
with a weight in the glass.
Base of the Goblet
Moving onto the base of the goblet.
Using a circle cutter to remove a section for the arm bones.
Then lay that into position.
Repeat the same design as the rim of the glass,
around the bottom edge.
Painting
Time to paint.
I am using water based acrylic paint.
Painting a solid black base coat.
Once that has dried,
I then go in with a metallic silver on top.
Caffeine
Re-fuel
'you know how it is.'
Brown Base coat on the triangles.
And then metallic bronze over the top of that.
PVA glue in the holes,
to attach the gems.
Solid brown base coat on the leather wraps.
I also lightly dry brushed over the bones
with an ivory colored paint.
Water down some brown paint
to add 'grime' to all the brown surfaces.
Brush on a thin layer
of watered down yellow over all the bones.
Widely blend in some orange/brown paint
around all the creases.
Go in with a light brown,
deeper in the bone joints.
Then with a small detail brush,
go in with a dark brown in the deepest areas.
Finish off the painting with a light brown rope.
Lighting
For inside the goblet I am using an orange/yellow tulle.
And a row of warm white LED's
Cut the tulle into lengths.
Wrap and scrunch the tulle around the LED's.
Then place the Tulle and LED's into the glass.
Coins
Now we can lay our coins and medallions
around the base of the goblet.
I have a full tutorial on making these,
over on YouTube - Nikita Maree
Final Thoughts
I made this goblet for my younger brothers 30th birthday.
I wanted it to be meaningful
so I added elements like the Scorpio constellation,
with Antares as a gem.
Added a few other Scorpio elements.
I added some Citrine/Topaz colors throughout
to match his Birthstone.
I also recreated his puzzle ring, that I bought for his 18th.
I went for a medieval gothic style for the actual goblet.
And added plenty of pirate elements.