Hayley Nance’s 1/13/12 DLR Photo Report

DLNT Reporter Hayley Nance was at the Disneyland resort this past weekend, and has some newsworthy photos to share…

Jolly Holiday Bakery has quite a crowd

The Adventureland entrance getting some TLC

Main Street refurbishment

Haunted Mansion is closed for holiday removal

The Matterhorn Bobsleds is currently closed for its refubishment

Looks like the loading gates have been removed

A tunnel has been constructed to protect guests from the construction

Over in DCA, the parade route work in front of Mermaid is still underway

Cars Land

Buena Vista Street

We cant figure out if that lettering was there before, or if it just was really faded.

The memories float has been removed

The improvements on the shuttle area have begun

Animation 1 Photoshoot

With the Art of Animation Resort opening at Walt Disney World tomorrow, I thought it would be a great time to share some pictures of Animation 1. 
Austin and I followed them around the parks for the day as they visited their favorite areas. (captions by Austin) More photos on our Facebook page

Aladdin
Magic Kingdom: Frontierland

Aladdin
EPCOT: Morocco
“Aladdin loves riding his camel (he just wishes it went a little faster).”

Alice
Magic Kingdom: Mad Tea Party
“Nothings better than having a nice cup of tea with the Cheshire Cat… especially when the cups are this big.”

Dodger
Hollywood Studios: Streets of America
“Woof! Woof! or as Billy Joel would say: Why should i worry? Why should i care?”

Fairy Godmother
Magic Kingdom: Cinderella’s Castle
“She has a great view to make sure that dress gets made and Cinderella gets to the ball on time.”

Hunchback of Notre Dame
Magic Kingdom: Sir Mickey’s
“Looking out from the bell tower at life below.”

Marie
EPCOT: France
“Which pet’s address is the finest in Paris?”

Frog Prince Naveen
Magic Kingdom: Liberty Square
“Just blowing off steam down by the river side.”

Peter Pan
Magic Kingdom: Fantasyland
“He can fly! He can fly! He Can fly!”

Phil
Hollywood Studios
“Hercules is inside training.”

Pink Elephant
Magic Kingdom: Pinocchio Village Haus
“He found the secret passageway, where does it lead exactly?”
Mushu
EPCOT: Japan
“I have officially found the coolest tree in Epcot.”

Pinocchio
Magic Kingdom: Pinocchio Village Haus
“Just hanging out in Pinocchio Village Haus.”

Pinocchio
Magic Kingdom: Pinocchio Village Haus
“Who’s the real boy? or are they both unreal?”

Pinocchio
Magic Kingdom: Pinocchio Village Haus
“First he loses the tail, then the ears, and then he’s a real boy!!!”

Romance Blooms in “The Magic, The Memories, and You!”, Summer Overlay Teased

From Shawn Slater on the Disney Parks Blog:

One of the true delights of the recent holiday season at Disney Parks was a special segment during our evening projection show, “The Magic, The Memories and You!” The faces of Cinderella Castle at Magic Kingdom Park and “it’s a small world” at Disneyland park were transformed into gingerbread masterpieces, brightly colored packages and palaces of ice.

Well if you enjoyed that, our Creative Entertainment team has another treat in store, just in time for Valentine’s Day! A new show segment is set to debut Feb. 1, inspired by some of the most romantic moments in Disney animation. Cinderella Castle and “it’s a small world” will be covered in red roses for one sequence and turned into a beautiful, star-filled sky for another. During part of the show, spectacular stained glass windows will grace the façades, depicting the stories of Cinderella, Snow White and Belle.

One of my favorite moments comes when the king and queen from “Tangled” appear on a balcony, lifting a single lantern to the sky for their missing daughter. It’s soon joined by hundreds of others, creating a magical sight sure to draw “oohs” and “ahhs” from the crowd. It gives me goosebumps just thinking about it! Of course, the most heart-warming part of any segment of “The Magic, The Memories and You!” is the images of our guests, captured by Disney PhotoPass photographers during the day and incorporated into the show each night.

The romance segment is planned to run as part of “The Magic, The Memories and You!” through mid-April but we’re not stopping there. Wait until you see “it’s a small world” as a sand castle in a segment we’re working on for summer. It’s chock full of detail… right up to the point where Goofy rides a wave across the façade, washing it all away to reveal… well, I don’t want to spoil all the surprises!

Custom Class with Rust This World: Lesson 1 – A Beginner’s Guide

Attention Students. Custom Class will now begin. I’m your teacher Rust This World. I have been customizing toys for over five years, and have in that time narrowed down my methods to what works best for me. I started with action figures, moved onto urban vinyl, and finally to Vinylmation a little over a year ago. Hopefully in my series of lessons that will be posted here on Destination Vinylmation, I will not only teach you about techniques that will help you in making a custom figure, but also some information about the materials and why specifically what I do works. Science and art combined.

This is my first lesson, hopefully of many. I have plans for lessons on airbrushing, sculpting, and making a light up figure, and would definitely do an entire column of user questions if there are enough. If anyone has any questions or requests for specific projects for me to demonstrate, message me on twitter @RustThisWorld or on Facebook facebook.com/rustthisworld.

In this lesson, I will be showing you the proper ways of painting a Vinylmation figure. These are the fundamentals of making the simplest custom Vinylmation by doing nothing more than painting it.

One quick disclaimer before I begin: If you’re a custom artist and your methods are different than mine, I am by no means saying that you’re wrong. These are the methods and products that work for me based on my experience.

We’ll start today’s lesson by discussing…

Paint Type

The most commonly used paint to use on figures is acrylic paint. There are various kind of acrylic paint, but the ones I use most often of those that used for models or hobbies.

Acrylic paint is made up of 4 things: The pigment, which is the raw color, water, which dilutes the paint and makes it possible to brush on and stay wet, the binder, which keeps the pigment and water mixed, and usually some sort of filler that’s a cheap way to fill the bottle without using as much binder or pigment. Some paints are harder to paint with because of their make up, such as white and red paints always being thicker because they use a lot of pigment, and yellows being thinner because they use less.

Here’s my collection of paints.

After years of doing this, I almost exclusively use Citadel Paints, which are made by Games Workshop (the company that does Warhammer). They’re more expensive than other more mainstream acrylic hobby paints, but the quality is unmatched.

Reasons I love Citadel Paints:

1. Long shelf life. Yes, paint doesn’t last forever. As the paint ages, the water dries out, causing the rest of the paint to become thick and sludgy, or even unusable.
2. Huge variety of colors. I’m not crazy about mixing my own colors, and will only do it on small occasions. The amount of colors that Citadel has is huge. I believe there are over 100.
3. Color Quality. Bright vibrant beautiful colors in every shade.
4. Consistency. The consistency of the paint is key to getting clean and smooth brush strokes. If your paint is too thick or too runny, you’ll end up with a mess. Citadel paint don’t need to be thinned or watered down, they’re always the perfect consistency.
5. They dry fast. When you’re painting a figure, you don’t want to wait for long periods of time for the paint to dry.
6. They naturally have a matte finish. Glossy finishes make things look cheap and plastic-y and only work if the subject matter is slimy or wet, like the Cutesters Turtle or Alice Oyster.
7. They dry perfectly. Often with cheaper paints, they will dry sticky or tacky on softer plastics. Citadel always completely dries.

There are other types of Acrylic paints such as Testors or Apple Barrel, but from my experience, they’re not as good. You can get Testors paints for extremely cheap at most hobby stores like Hobby Lobby or Michaels, but their shelf life and colors are not very good in my opinion. Their white and yellow colors are really bad, too. I have a few bottles of testers, they’re all metallic colors.

Brushes

Other than paint, the other thing you need are brushes. Here’s my collection of brushes that I currently use.

Most of my brushes are Watercolor brushes. I use watercolor brushes mainly because they have very smooth bristles, which will leave you with less brush strokes in your paint. I also only really use tiny brushes. The smallest one I use is a 0/4 or 0000 size brush, which is used for super tiny detail and line painting. Blick’s site has a great scale brush size comparison chart so you know what size brush to get: www.dickblick.com/info/brushpdf/brushsizing.pdf

Basing Your Figure

Even if you’re using a Create-Your-Own figure, you need to base it for a few reasons. The first is that CYOs are often just pulled from the molds at the factories and put in the boxes, which means that they’re covered in mold release of some other form of lubrication. The lube is oil based, and any water based acrylic paint you paint on it with, will smear and bubble and separate. In fact, if you’re using a CYO at all, you should wash it with soap and water before doing anything.The other reason is that a thin, smooth, white base coat will make all paint that goes on top adhere much smoother. You can totally paint over non-CYO figures as well. I’m not using a CYO because I’m unabashedly in love with the new mold, and they don’t make new mold CYOs. So this turtle is getting sacrificed to the custom gods today.

Here’s what I use. It’s a white spray on enamel primer, and aside from what I said about Testors earlier, their spray paint is decent. I use white because every color will look bright when painting on top of it. Using a black primer will make any color painted on top look darker. Citadel makes a primer too, but it costs about as much as a down payment on a car and isn’t different enough . These spray primers are meant for models and spray in thin layers. I would not recommend buying industrial grade spray paint from a hardware store, as it will probably spray on much thicker and you may lose detail in the sculpt.

Don’t go overboard on spray this the primer. If you spray too much in one spot, the paint will get thick and drip down the figure. Spray in small bursts from 9-12″ inches away until it’s covered. Here’s what my figure looks like after one pass.

If you think there a spot that needs more paint, wait and until the figure is dry and go back and spray more. I can still see the eyes and some details in the above picture, so I waited about 10 minutes and sprayed some more. I can get about 15-20 3″ figures based out of one of those cans.

Sketching

I always draw my design onto one of the templates from the official Vinylmation blog, so I know how it will look and make any changes before I start painting.

One I’ve based the figure, I take a pencil and sketch my design onto the figure. This isn’t necessary, but it’s very helpful for know exactly how your design will be applied to the figure and will make sure that you paint it correctly the first time.

Painting

I start with the bottom base colors in big blocks. So Donald’s orange beak, his blue shirt, his bow tie, etc. All of the small details I’ll be painting on top of the base colors.

Depending on their consistency, some colors will need multiple coats of paint to look good. Let each layer dry before a brushing on a new layer. Don’t smear a ton of paint on at once, or it will dry clumpy.

When painting, get a small amount of paint on the brush and softly wipe it in even strokes. If you get too much paint on the brush, it will leave clumps and uneven spot. While the paint is still wet, you can continue brushing it in different directions to achieve a smooth even coat.

Even though I have like 30 different colors of paint, sometimes I need a color that I don’t have. Donald’s eyes have a light blue hue to them, but the light blue color I have is a little too dark. I have a small palette that cost like a dollar that I can mix paint in. For those of you who have mixed paint or studied color theory before, here’s the basic rule:

Adding white to a color will “tint” the color and lighten it.
Adding black to a color with “shade” the color and darken it.
Adding grey to a color will “tone” the color and desaturated it.

So to get a lighter blue color, I mix white with a tiny bit of light blue.

I then go in with my smallest brush and add lines and detail to the figure. It’s easier to add the lines after the initial color so that the larger strokes of filling in a large area won’t accidentally overlap on your lines. This part is extremely difficult even though I’ve been doing it for years. The secret is a steady hand and a lot of patience. I’m not perfect at it and I messed up in a few places, but I’ll show you how to fix that relatively easy.

I’m sure there are some people out there who are awesome at painting perfectly straight lines the first time around, but here’s what I do if I accidentally paint a line too thick. I felt that the black line for Donald’s eyebrow is too broad, so I took some white paint and painted it on either side of the brow to thin the black line.

I also did this in several places all over the figure, like the bill and the bow tie.

One thing you can do if you feel that your paint is too thick or there are clumps or brush strokes in places is use sandpaper to sand the paint down. I use very very fine sandpaper (size 180). I tear off a small piece and sand down any visible brush strokes. Sometimes, the sandpaper with ruin the paint where you are rubbing it, but you can always go back and apply a new layer of paint where you sanded, being more careful not to show brush strokes the second time.

After this, I’m pretty satisfied with the paint, but there’s one more step to preserve it.

Sealing the figure

If you want your figure to have longevity, have a nice uniform look, and not get scuffed, you’ll want to seal your figure. Sealer is a clear coat of paint that protects everything paint underneath it. Here’s the sealer I use.

The Dullcoat gives the figure a matte finish and the gloss coat gives the figure a glossy finish.The cans look almost exactly the same, but the dull coat has a cloudy top and the gloss coat has a clear top. That and they say Dull or Gloss on the little sticker label on the cap.

Spray sealer is pretty toxic, so you don’t want to spray it indoors and you definitely don’t want to deeply inhale it. I usually wear a dust mask when I use this. If spraying isn’t your thing, you can also buy sealers and varnishes in bottles and brush it on. If you’re spraying outside (like you should be) it should take about 10 minutes to dry. I spray on each side.

Cleaning Your Brush

So you just bought a really nice watercolor brush, but now it’s covered in paint, what do you do?

This is a bottle of Winsor and Newton Brush Cleaner and Restorer. It’s an alcohol based solvent than not only strips the paint from your brush, but also restores the bristles so that they don’t dry out or break.

So as not to contaminate the rest of bottle, I turn the cap upside down and pour a little bit of the cleaner into the cap. I then swish my brush around, brush it on the top and bottom, and then wipe it off on a paper towel. This usually cleans fresh paint right off. If you’ve let the paint on your brush dry for several hours, you’ll have to soak the brush in the cleaner for 10-20 minutes for the paint to loosen and dissolve.

As a bonus, at the end, your paper towel will double as an abstract painting.

Conclusion

Proper materials is 50% of making a good figure. The other 50% is up to the creativity and skills of the custom artist. I’ve been painting figures for years and I went to art school, but even I’m not perfect. Practice and patience is the key to making a good-looking figure that will earn you tons of Internet respect. No one’s first figure is going to be stellar. Hopefully this tutorial will save you a lot of the trial and error that I went through and get you off on the right foot with the right general idea of how to customize.

Hayley Nance’s 1/28/12 Disneyland Park Photo Report

DLNT Reporter Hayley Nance was a Disneyland this past weekend and took some neat shots of the Matterhorn, a look at some new items in Jolly Holiday Bakery, and much more…

Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

Welcome to Disneyland

The Tinkerbell half marathon was this past weekend

One quick look at the DCA entrance

The Haunted Mansion has reopened from the holiday version

Matterhorn refurbishment is going at full speed

Photo & Video Sharing by SmugMug

And one quick update in Jolly Holiday. It looks like some new props were added in the display case. The silver house on the left and the hummel which is the small figure on the right. Not sure of the significance of either but the hummel was once sold by Disney.

Animal Kingdom; Just Part of the Mystery

I should just learn to not try and understand Disney. Brad sent us this screen shot from the DisneyStore.com.

Wow, thanks Disney! Can I really buy a Mystery Animal Kingdom figure for $9.95! After I could have picked out the exact one I wanted while they were in the stores? After I could have grabbed them at discount at the outlets? After I could have added one to my cart for only $1.99 with my other online purchases. And even right now as I write this article, you can go on eBay and buy the exact one you want for less than $10 shipped. These are the kind of moves that begin to disillusion collectors. I know I’m asking too much, but maybe Disney could think about putting these suffering guys down and out of their misery? Close the flood gates and get this product, and other over-produced ones like it, off the market. If Disney is going to call this a collectible, it needs to be treated as such. Put a time limit on the shelf life of these products.

CYO Vinylmation 95 Lightning McQueen

Update 6/15/12 The WDW release had been delayed until June 29. It will still release at DLR on June 15.



Update 6/13/12 We have a price point for the CYO Vinylmation 95. It will be $39.95 according to the Disney Vinylmation Events page.

On June 15th, a Create Your Own version of the new 9″ Lightning shaped Vinylmation will release at WDW and DLR.

Custom artists…. what are your ideas? And remember, Noah launches his customs on this platform on June 9th at DTD Disneyland.

Disney Character Star Wars Photoshoot

What a coincidence. While at Star Wars Weekends at Disney’s Hollywood Studios the other day we ran into the Disney Character Star Wars figures checking out the festivities. It seems as if they hung out at Star Tours for a while and then visited some of their favorite attractions.

 

 

 

 

Pete dressed as Boba Fett and stood in line for an hour to meet Jaba, only to find out this was the real Boba Fett’s meet and greet line…. awkward.

 

Darth Vader Goofy figured the first step to (Disney) world domination is research. So he hopped aboard the Studio Backlot Tour to learn more… complete waste of time.

 

Princess Leia Minnie used her alone time to take in a show. Not even Obi Wan could save her from this performance.

 

Stormtrooper Donald decided to terrorize some guests.

 

X-Wing Pilot Mickey figured he would learn the ways of the force from some Jedi Masters…

 

…in hopes of improving his pathetic 23,000 point score on Toy Story Midway Mania.

 

Stitch Yoda found out the hard way… Help answer trivia questions, the force does not.
“These are not the Fast Passes you are looking for.”

 

Disneyland Explorer Letting You Experience The Magic From Your iPad

From Michele Himmelberg on the Disney Parks Blog:

The magical sights and sounds of Disneyland Resort can now be discovered with “Disneyland Explorer,” the official Disney Parks app for iPad, available as a free download from the App Store. When you can’t get to the theme parks, the hotels or the Downtown Disney District, you can tap the photo-realistic carousel of this app to reveal photos, video and special activities inspired by the classic attractions and entertainment at the resort.

More than 100 exciting experiences are shared with beautiful images, animation and interactive touch points. With a simple swipe of your fingers, you can explore Pirates of the Caribbean, Star Tours – The Adventures Continue, the themed suites at the Disneyland Hotel and much more. Watch for animation and fun surprises as you scroll through the adventures.

 

The magical sights and sounds of Disneyland Resort can now be discovered with “Disneyland Explorer,” the official Disney Parks app for iPad, available as a free download from the App Store. When you can’t get to the theme parks, the hotels or the Downtown Disney District, you can tap the photo-realistic carousel of this app to reveal photos, video and special activities inspired by the classic attractions and entertainment at the resort.

More than 100 exciting experiences are shared with beautiful images, animation and interactive touch points. With a simple swipe of your fingers, you can explore Pirates of the Caribbean, Star Tours – The Adventures Continue, the themed suites at the Disneyland Hotel and much more. Watch for animation and fun surprises as you scroll through the adventures.

 

WDWNT’s Own Tom Corless was kind enough to try out the app for us and take some screen shots to share with everybody.







Find Harold 🙂
You drag the Big Thunder train


























It looks like some virtual postcards were some of the pries you got for playing the virtual mini games

And one final picture, Tom visited the Animation Academy in the app where you can actually learn how to draw characters on your ipad. Here you can see Tom attempted to drew mickey.

One Ohioan’s Opinion: A Vinylmation Editorial

“Keith is one of the first people I remember meeting on twitter after starting Destination Vinylmation. We asked him to write a post if he ever had anything to say, and almost two years later we got this great opinion piece.”- M.C.

 

My name is Keith and I am a Vinylmation addict.

That seems to be an appropriate way to start this off don’t you think? Let’s first look at my dilemma. Vinylmation… They were a curious thing when I ran across them two years ago in the Art of Disney store in Epcot. I had seen them at the all-star sports gift shop before then but brushed them off seeing as I had no clue what the things were. My turning point was seeing the Muppet series. I have been a Disney and Muppet fanatic for my entire life. It has simply been engrained in me. Once I understood that these were artist pieces, and that they were themed to incorporate one of my other loves (Muppets) I was hooked.

I bought maybe four Muppet series 1 boxes and that was it for that trip. Little did I know two years later I’d be headed back to the same hotel under the same circumstances with about 40 doubles to trade. I’m pretty sure the first thing I did once I got my room key was pick up my carry on (where I had my traders) and head down to the gift shop. I had only traded once in Ohio at a local Disney store because mostly they were flooded with cutesters which I do not collect. I was excited at the prospect of mystery boxes, that is until I had to deal with getting around all of the challenges they present. But more on those later.

My hotel didn’t have a mystery box. They said it was broken. So instead they had a clear bin full of probably 24. I have to say I started off well. I had loads of Animation 1, Toy Story and Muppets 1 to trade. The woman at the trading box let me look through the figures and figure out what I wanted, then I asked “I can only trade once right?” She then looked around and replied… “I don’t see a manager so you can trade as much as you want.” Music to my ears! So I traded once more and decided to head to the parks.

The most common theme between locations was that there was no theme, no specific set of rules, no strict guidelines to follow and that was kind of fun. Vinylmation rules seem to resemble urban legends, they vary from place to place. In one place I was told I could pick once, only once, and that I absolutely must trade. Thank goodness that only happened once. Pretty sure it was at Once Upon a Toy. Needless to say I only traded there once. The boy working there acted as if those rules were ever broken that the world as we knew it would cease to exist. I’m fine with rules, even strict ones… But not when there is no guarantee to the quality or worth of what I’m getting back. Overall my experience with trading and the “rules” of the trade were pretty great though. That is really the only interaction that was less then fun.

I had a lot of “pick three numbers” and a lot of “you can trade twice” situations which are pretty wonderful when there is no clear box as a backup. I also had a number of “what are you looking for” interactions which help some but sometimes targeted cast members in on one series when I really just wanted anything I didn’t have. Once it worked out well and I basically helped refresh a box for a couple of figures I was looking for. It was like we were working together for the greater good.

I had a wish list of figures I wanted to find and I’m happy to say I found a number of them. Especially the Muppetvision 3D balloon. That particular figure was found completely by luck on my last day at the parks during a special interaction with a deaf cast member at the gallery store at Hollywood Studios. It absolutely made my trip. All in all trading at Walt Disney World was a fun and hectic experience. With about 40 figures I wanted to trade, I had my work cut out for me! It also made me very aware of the challenges of trading.

I’ll end this out with some suggestions to make the process more enjoyable and less stressful. Disney, I hope you are listening 😉
-Train cast members to look for flaws in figures. (I didn’t run across this a ton but there were some figures missing paint, or dirty… One even looked like it had snot on it)
-Have a simple guide for cast members to check for accessories before allowing figures to be traded. (Traded for a Blackbeard with no hat, had to put him back, I was pretty bummed. Same thing happened with an Epcot 2000 without a wand.)
-Once figures go “ON SALE” don’t allow them in trading boxes anymore. (The last few days I tried to trade I could not find anything other than Occupation series which I have no interest in whatsoever.)
-Only allow a certain number of one figure in each box. (I had one cast member turn a box around for me and the whole entire bottom row of the box was Big Al. If they still want to accept them that’s fine but they need to keep the boxes varied.)
-Re-purpose some of the figures that are trade box regulars. (Retire the Bearded Man… They just need to own the bad designs. There has to be something they can do with the more undesirable figures they have done. Melt them down and recycle them into new vinyl? I’m not positive what the answer is but those figures shouldn’t be forced on collectors.)
And finally… The rules. I actually like the differences in rules depending on where you go in the parks. I don’t think you should ever be forced to trade though. If you pick a number and it’s a clearance red create your own and you are trading a new park figure you just bought for full price you should not be forced to trade. There’s nothing “fun” about that and that’s what trading should be.

Hopefully, this helps newbies like me go into trading at the parks with a little more understanding of the challenges they might run into. Just like the guys say every week! Keep on collecting!
-Keith

“If you have an opinion to share, email us!”