The Den of Slack

emilymorganti.com

Page 204 of 232

Aw, shingle!

My grandmother used to say “Aw, sugar!” in front of me, instead of swearing. Today I say “Aw, shingle!” because I seriously hurt myself with the glue gun earlier.

I was gluing shingles on my puzzle house and got a huge glop of hot glue on the back of a shingle. I went to throw it out, thinking that was the best way to prevent it from making a mess, and on the way to the trash can the shingle managed to glue itself to my thumb. That glue was HOT! It stuck to my skin and I had to pull it off with a rag. This wasn’t just a little burn. It hurt big time, in all of my fingers and up my arm. (Um, I hope that’s not a sign of nerve damage…) For about two hours I soaked it in cold water which made it feel better, but when I stopped doing that it hurt so bad I thought I would pass out. (I’m not being a crybaby about this… it really, really hurt!) I took Tylenol a few hours ago and it’s finally bearable, but I suspect that’s more due to the drugs than because it’s miraculously healed. Needless to say, my shingling was cut short for the day.

But let’s back up a bit. On Sunday, I glued the roof to the puzzle house. The siding I added messed up the fit a little bit, but in general it fit pretty well.

Originally I had planned to use my leftover Fairfield shingles on this house, but they’ve already been stained and I felt like the color wasn’t quite right. Plus I didn’t know if I’d have enough to cover it all.

I’m trying to keep my costs low on this house, so instead of buying shingles, I thought I’d make my own. I have several bags of Corona Concepts siding strips lying around and decided to use these. Usually staining shingles is really messy, but this was easy—I just stained the individual strips before cutting them down to shingle size. I used some Minwax Ebony stain left over from another project.

Using the Fairfield’s shingles as a guide, I then cut the strips into individual shingles. Each one is about 3/8″ wide. The wood is thin and easy to cut with scissors, although it does tend to crack when I try to cut very narrow pieces for the edges or the angle where the gable meets the roof.

You can buy shingle strips, which are a lot quicker to apply than individual shingles, but I prefer gluing on shingles one by one because you get a nice variety of shades. Here’s as far as I got before the unfortunate glue gun incident.

I’m pretty happy with the look of the shingles. Less so with the trim color. The gray is much more in-your-face than I expected and I just don’t think it looks great, especially compared to the shingles. I feel like it needs to be more subtle. I’m not sure at this point if I should try a different shade of gray, or another color completely.

To be continued once my thumb heals…

Puzzle house, with paint!

A couple of months ago, Glidden did a promotion where you could get a quart of paint for free, no strings attached. (Well, you had to give them your address so they could send you the paint. Seemed like a fair trade.) I ordered Belgian Waffle, a perfectly nice peachy color, but somehow in the time that passed while I was waiting for it to come, my brain changed it into a shade of yellow, because that’s what I’ve been picturing the whole time I’ve been building the puzzle house. As it turns out, Belgian Waffle is NOT yellow and is, in fact, the same peachy color as the chip I saw on the Glidden website when I ordered it. Who would have thunk it?

After about five minutes of my brain going OMG, it looks like a Creamsicle!!!!, I got over my yellow-misconception and saw Belgian Waffle for the pretty, peachy color it is. Here’s the house with two coats of it.


There’s some wood filler on the porch that I covered up after taking this picture.

I did that on Monday. Today I picked up some gray paint for the trim. Since the door is wood and the windows styrene, I painted them all with a coat of Gesso first to (hopefully) end up with a finish that looks the same on all of them. Then I did one coat of the gray—I still have to do another coat to even it out, but here’s what it looks like. Even with the Gesso, the door came out a little more blue/gray than the windows, but I’m hoping that after the second coat they’ll look pretty similar.

All of the windows except for the bay came with a removable piece that will hold the clear plastic inside the window (you can see them at the top of that last picture). I’m planning to keep those white for the interior. The bay window doesn’t have a piece like that, so I taped the back to (hopefully) prevent the gray paint getting on the inside. We’ll see if it works…

Announcing Dragons Vs Robots

It’s been a little over two months since I left my day job, and one of the wonderful discoveries I’ve made is that being a free agent gives me the opportunity to do all sorts of work with all sorts of different companies. (And work on my novel. Yes, that.) Over the summer I hooked up with Massiverse, a transmedia entertainment company based in New York, to help them prepare for their first big announcement: Dragons Vs Robots, a sci-fi/fantasy franchise designed for kids ages 9-14.

What’s transmedia, you ask? It’s a neat—and potentially very profitable—way of telling a story that uses multiple formats to draw out different parts of the narrative. As a writer, this concept excites me in an almost cosmic way, because I’ve always loved the idea that stories and characters exist in some other reality, and it’s the writer’s job to channel that reality and transcribe it. The idea of transmedia stimulates the same part of my brain that thought it was eerie-yet-awesome that all of JD Salinger’s characters, across all of his different novels and even some short stories, seemed to know each other. (Well, except for Holden Caufield. Whatever. Who’s even read Catcher in the Rye, anyway?)

This morning Massiverse formally announced Dragons Vs Robots with the unveiling of an online battle game and manga series, both of which are available for free at the Dragons Vs Robots website. A feature film is in the works (in collaboration with Jinks/Cohen Productions of American Beauty fame), along with young adult novels, online webisodes, toys, and a trading card line—all of which will tell the Dragons Vs Robots narrative in different ways, with stories intersecting and in some cases changing based on user participation. The results of the online battle game will influence the overall narrative. The toys and trading cards will link back to the online universe. From a business standpoint, it makes for many potential entry points and revenue streams, but even more exciting to me is the storytelling potential. Ambitious stuff.

If you’re curious about Dragons Vs Robots, here are some links to explore:

Oh, and I’m a dragon, if you were wondering.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2024 The Den of Slack

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑