Layaway is available for this item; please contact me for details! My layaway plans are quite generous, and I'm more than willing to work you to find a payment plan that works for your budget!
New or reclaimed from industry materials: Acrylic paint, sealant, epoxy putty
Secondhand/recycled materials: Breyer quarter horse yearling, chalk, acrylic paint
Description: The quarter horse yearling was one of Breyer's earlier molds, first released in 1970. This particular pony started out as #942 Bosley, with lots of scratches and marks on her paint job. She's now a colorful sorrel blanket appaloosa
I gave her a pretty good overhaul; while she's not a drastic custom, I put a lot of work into her, to include the following:
--Lowered her head, detached and resculpted the lower part of her tail and back of her leg, added chestnuts on the inside of her forelegs, removed, sanded and filled her Breyer logo and seams
--Carved her ears, nostrils and mouth (hooves are uncarved as she has four on the floor)
--Fixed her badly mismatched/clubbed hooves by resculpting all four to one degree or another
--Painted her in chalk and acrylics, including adding multiple layers of chalk and sealant, added mapped spots, and painstakingly roaned her with individual brushstrokes, as well as adding details to her hooves and face
--Sealed her paint with several coats of Krylon spray
--Glossed her eyes, nostrils, mouth and hooves
Her paint job is not LSQ; there are brush strokes and the occasional slightly rough spot, along with a couple teensy flaws in the putty. However, she turned out rather nicely all around and would be a great display or PSQ piece. She is NOT meant to be a child's toy! She measures 9 1/2" long x 3" wide x 8" tall.
Price: $125
On Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/listing/495118.....ditional-scale
New or reclaimed from industry materials: Acrylic paint, sealant, epoxy putty
Secondhand/recycled materials: Breyer quarter horse yearling, chalk, acrylic paint
Description: The quarter horse yearling was one of Breyer's earlier molds, first released in 1970. This particular pony started out as #942 Bosley, with lots of scratches and marks on her paint job. She's now a colorful sorrel blanket appaloosa
I gave her a pretty good overhaul; while she's not a drastic custom, I put a lot of work into her, to include the following:
--Lowered her head, detached and resculpted the lower part of her tail and back of her leg, added chestnuts on the inside of her forelegs, removed, sanded and filled her Breyer logo and seams
--Carved her ears, nostrils and mouth (hooves are uncarved as she has four on the floor)
--Fixed her badly mismatched/clubbed hooves by resculpting all four to one degree or another
--Painted her in chalk and acrylics, including adding multiple layers of chalk and sealant, added mapped spots, and painstakingly roaned her with individual brushstrokes, as well as adding details to her hooves and face
--Sealed her paint with several coats of Krylon spray
--Glossed her eyes, nostrils, mouth and hooves
Her paint job is not LSQ; there are brush strokes and the occasional slightly rough spot, along with a couple teensy flaws in the putty. However, she turned out rather nicely all around and would be a great display or PSQ piece. She is NOT meant to be a child's toy! She measures 9 1/2" long x 3" wide x 8" tall.
Price: $125
On Etsy: https://www.etsy.com/listing/495118.....ditional-scale
Category Crafting / Animal related (non-anthro)
Species Horse
Size 1000 x 741px
File Size 553.4 kB
FA+

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