Continuing making detailing parts.
Here's introducing how I make a parts with complicated shape.
When you use a aluminum sheet and to try to make a parts which has some bumps or
complicated curves, it may raise any wrinkle or twisting on the surface.
To avoid such trouble, you can use the annealing technique.
The key is the temperature.
Well, how do you know the appropriate temperature?
Here's the most simple way to know it.
-- Do I talk like Martha Stewart?.
This is a 0.5mm aluminum sheet.
I will make a hump on it.
Mark anything where you want to annealing with magic marker. It doesn't matter if it's a spot or all over the surface.
It depends on what you want to do with it.
This time I like to make a little hump on a small spot on the parts, So I just mark the small dot on it.
Then heat it up with a burner a several seconds.
When it reach the appropriate temperature, the marking is disappeared. Leave it for several seconds to let it cool down. That's it.
When it's cool down, the material turns out to be like a sheet of clay. Still hard but very flexible.
These are just 1/10 of what I need.
I will continue to sketch and build of the detailing parts.
Thank you very much for looking.
Any question is welcomed.
Katsu