Halloween, using prostectics and facepaint, wish I could do it all year hehe ^_^
This features the following products:
Wild Cat Nose by North Fur (with their paint work on the main prosthetic) (http://www.northfur.ca/shop/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=83_84&products_id=316&zenid=fdn7es2dtc5bp3mhqs93ip3lm1)
Medium Traditional Vampire Fangs by Psykic Fangs (http://www.psykicfangs.sanguinarius.org/fangs/fangs.html)
Water based body paint by Trendy Tribal (applied with a airbrush and compressor, bought seperately)( http://www.trendytribals.com/ )
Custom collar from the Collar Factory (http://collarfactory.com/)
Pointy Ear Tips by woochie (generic)
Proaide Adhesive (generic)
Red cat contact lenses (http://www.visiondirect.com/red-cat-contact-lens/qxp90961)
If you’ve managed to look through all of these pictures, thank you! I will mention that using a nose prosthetic for the first time was an enlightening experience. The first few things I learned:
1. If possible, get a mask with nose holes or use something to plug your nose. By the end of the night I was dripping a bit and it was rubbing all over the inside of the mask, and it was taking the adhesive off. I didn’t even have a cold!
2. Have your cleaning stuff ready. This took 2 hours more because I kept going back in to touch up stuff up. When I got home I had issues as well, having gone out that night to a party or two and getting back late just to have to try and fiddle around with getting cleaned up. My bathroom sink looked like a warzone
3. Color it yourself – trying to match the grey and the yellow that the manufacturer of the mask was difficult when you aren’t using the same paint.
4. Plan how you want to take it off – this goes with clean up, but having never put this on before I slapped it on with adhesive and left no gaps to get the adhesive remover underneath. Getting this off was a bit more painful and messy then it had to be.
This features the following products:
Wild Cat Nose by North Fur (with their paint work on the main prosthetic) (http://www.northfur.ca/shop/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=83_84&products_id=316&zenid=fdn7es2dtc5bp3mhqs93ip3lm1)
Medium Traditional Vampire Fangs by Psykic Fangs (http://www.psykicfangs.sanguinarius.org/fangs/fangs.html)
Water based body paint by Trendy Tribal (applied with a airbrush and compressor, bought seperately)( http://www.trendytribals.com/ )
Custom collar from the Collar Factory (http://collarfactory.com/)
Pointy Ear Tips by woochie (generic)
Proaide Adhesive (generic)
Red cat contact lenses (http://www.visiondirect.com/red-cat-contact-lens/qxp90961)
If you’ve managed to look through all of these pictures, thank you! I will mention that using a nose prosthetic for the first time was an enlightening experience. The first few things I learned:
1. If possible, get a mask with nose holes or use something to plug your nose. By the end of the night I was dripping a bit and it was rubbing all over the inside of the mask, and it was taking the adhesive off. I didn’t even have a cold!
2. Have your cleaning stuff ready. This took 2 hours more because I kept going back in to touch up stuff up. When I got home I had issues as well, having gone out that night to a party or two and getting back late just to have to try and fiddle around with getting cleaned up. My bathroom sink looked like a warzone
3. Color it yourself – trying to match the grey and the yellow that the manufacturer of the mask was difficult when you aren’t using the same paint.
4. Plan how you want to take it off – this goes with clean up, but having never put this on before I slapped it on with adhesive and left no gaps to get the adhesive remover underneath. Getting this off was a bit more painful and messy then it had to be.
Category Photography / Fursuit
Species Cheetah
Size 748 x 800px
File Size 493.7 kB
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