Sunday, January 29, 2017

Snow Angels

There is nothing easier than making angels in the snow. I'm not referring to flapping your arms and legs around while feeling the cold, wet snow on your back. I'm referring to real snow angels. They are easier than anything else. Just make the shape in a pile of snow and scoop the snow from around it. No skill required.

The only tool I use to make angels is a hand shovel. A hand shovel is the gadget you'd use to dig in the garden when you plant your young vegetable plants. Sometimes I use a snow shovel to flatten the front of a snow bank before I get started. This helps to make the 'front snow' more packed. It's important to have packed snow so that the angel doesn't fall apart while you carve it out.

The disadvantage of making angels is that they are the first ones to melt when the temperature goes above the freezing point, and they are harder to reconstruct than the bigger snow sculptures are.

Angels can also be made in forms. Pack a 5 gallon pail full with snow, pack it very densely, and turn it over, a bit like a snowcake. Then you can sculpt out the angel. I have some pictures of those, but will need to find them.

As always, you can click on the images to make them larger.
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Saturday, January 28, 2017

Ice Face

This is Ice Face. The snow had been melting and froze into a big block of ice. This is the hardest kind to sculpt, but we need to entertain and few drivers who venture on this back road. Meet IceFace, born in January 2017, lived 6 days, until he half melted and a foot of snow buried him.






Happy Face

Making a happy face in the snow takes minutes. We like to make them in the snowbank on the roadside to give people something to smile about. It requires no skill, and hardly any time.

This one lasted several weeks. It's all about timing when you make snow sculptures.


A Cup Of Tea

This was one of the easiest sculptures. A Cup of Tea.
Making the cup was far easier than getting in and out of it. Mark had to lift me in and out.
We used some rope and a piece of cardboard for the 'tea tag".
We made our cup of tea in the winter of 2014. The snow was generous that day, sticking like chewing gum under the seat of a chair.
Best snow ever. We rarely get "good" snow, because it's usually too cold for the snow to stick. When we do get the perfect snow, it's considered sinful not to make a sculpture.

Click on the images to get a better and bigger view.
Also, feel free to stop by any time, as I will be uploading more pictures. We've made dozens of sculptures in recent years.




Thursday, January 26, 2017

The Turtle

If you want some advice... don't ever sit on the back of  a snow turtle. You wouldn't believe how cold and wet that was - or maybe you would.
Turtelidoo took about 2 hours to make. We made this one in front of the house, by the street. You can see some dirty stuff mixed in with the snow. That's from the sand trucks. They don't know that grown kids like us need white snow.
Turtelidoo stuck around for a long time, until a thaw made his head fall off. He was later replaced by a lion, of which I'll upload a picture soon.
You can tell by the size of it that it wasn't a baby turtle.
Click on the picture to see it full-size.

Thanks you for visiting, stop in any time for more. I will be uploading new images of sculptures soon.


A Foot Of Snow

One of our first snow sculptures.. "A foot of snow". It was early winter 2012, and we used pretty much every bit of snow that was in our back yard :) The foot stayed there forever. Cold temperatures throughout the winter helped preserving it. It was the very last thing to melt in spring, and it seemed very stubborn. When the grass had won the fight with the snow, part of the foot was still hanging on. It looked grotesque in the end, pathetically trying to hold on to its last bits.

Never underestimate a foot of snow :)

You can click on the picture to have a better view.
Thanks for visiting. I hope you enjoy this blog :)



Wednesday, January 25, 2017

How to make a snow sculpture

How to make a snow sculpture.

We've been snow sculpting for a few years now, and we make quite a few sculptures every year. I've gathered some experience over the years, and I'd like to write some of it down here because there is not a lot of information about this on the net.

Ideal snow.

Yes, there is such thing as ideal snow for sculpting. Sculpting works best when the temperature is right around 36 degrees Fahrenheit (just a little above freezing). The snow will 'pack' real well at that temperature. Anything higher and you're looking at a quickly melting mess. Anything lower and it won't pack too well.

There is heavy snow and there is powdery snow. Clearly, the heavy snow works best, but that doesn't mean that you can't use the powdery stuff. No snow it too bad for sculpting.


Tools

We use shovels to pile up the snow, and we use a hand shovel as well as a trowel for the actual sculpting. Sometimes a knife is used for sculpting small details.
The trowel is a must because your tools need to be sharp. If a tool is not sharp, you could end up breaking off parts of the sculptures. Also, a sharp tool makes clean cuts. Cutting through snow is not always as easy as it sounds.


How to start

There are different ways to start, depending on the size of the sculpture. If you are making a small sculpture, you can put the snow in a form (like a 5 gallon pail), make a snowcake and then sculpt away. Forms are good if you want to make a face, and they can also be used in combination with other methods. For example, when we sculpt humans, we might sculpt them from a pile of snow, and then make a snowcake for the head. Put the snowcake on the body, and sculpt the face.

For larger sculptures you need to pile up snow, lots and lots of snow. A snowblower works well, and so does a shovel or a wovel. Make sure to "pack" the snow constantly because you want a solid block. If you don't pack the snow, the sculpture will crumble and you'll have a real hard time with it. Best is to pile and pack the snow several days in advance, and then let it sit for a few days. We usually pile up snow early in the week and let it sit until the weekend. The packing of the snow is the secret to a good, solid sculpture. The temperature doesn't matter as much, as long as you have the snow packed very carefully. Give it a few days and it will settle.

To make snowcakes, pack the snow really, really well in a clean 5 gallon pail or any device you want to use. I really mean pack it well. If your 5 gallon pail doesn't weigh about 20 pounds, then you haven't packed it well enough. To get the snowcake out of the form, bang on the sides real hard. This is not an easy part, the snowcake won't just slide out, you have to loosen it by banging on the sides of the form. Lift the upside down form now and then to see if it is ready to slide. Make sure to slide the snowcake out in the spot where you're going to use it. Moving it afterwards is very difficult, or let's say nearly impossible.

Balls: Other than a big pile of snow and snowcakes, you can also roll balls, depending on what you are going to carve. Big balls pack automatically under their own weight and are often easier to sculpt with than piles of snow.


The sculpting

Once you have your snow ready, which is the hardest part, you are ready to sculpt. Work slowly and carefully. You can add snow if you mess up, but the sculpture will not be as strong as when you work from the original pile.
Use common sense. Think physics. It's a pity when you make a huge sculpture and then it ends up collapsing. Avoid this by using common sense.