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Polylord

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When posting a thread about my project of carving the Argonath out of stone (click here), people asked me to post pictures of a previous project, of the Gates of Moria.

Here are some pictures of that carving I did out of stone. It represents the Gates of Moria, where the Fellowship try to enter the Mines of Moria.

Step 1: It all begins with a scan from the book of Lord of the Rings, and a
stone that I've filed flat.
poortvanmoria01.jpg


Step 2: I've started with the first column and the branches of the tree that
curl around it.
poortvanmoria02.jpg


Step 3: The first column starts to get its shape.
poortvanmoria03.jpg


Step 4: It was hard to get the arch nice and round.
poortvanmoria04.jpg


Step 5: The second column gets carved.
poortvanmoria05.jpg


Step 6: The second column gets more details.
poortvanmoria06.jpg


Step 7: A start on the right tree. The black lines you see are just lines in
the stone, not cracks fortunately!
poortvanmoria07.jpg


Step 8: The branches of the trees are hard to shape in the stone, because
they're so tortuous.
poortvanmoria08.jpg


Step 9: Starting on the part underneath the arch; the crown.
poortvanmoria09.jpg


Step 10: The second column gets more detail, as gets the crown. I added the
stars above to the crown too, just to get an idea of what that will look like.
They will be erased later before being placed there permanently.
poortvanmoria10.jpg
 
Step 11: The branches of the right tree get more detail.
poortvanmoria11.jpg


Step 12: The branches of the right tree are nearly finished, I started on the
left tree.
poortvanmoria12.jpg


Step 13: The branches of the right tree are finished, the left tree starts to
get its shape.
poortvanmoria13.jpg


Step 14: The left tree gets more detail, the first layer of a star appears in
the middle. The bottom parts of the trees are connected.
poortvanmoria14.jpg


Step 15: Both trees are now practically finished.
poortvanmoria15.jpg


Step 16: The star gets its second layer (4 points added). I made the stone
partially wet to see what effect the wax will have when I put it on later.
poortvanmoria16.jpg


Step 17: The crown, the star, the columns and the arch get waxed.
poortvanmoria25.jpg


Step 18: The final result: The Elvish markings are engraved in the arch (that
was a very precise job!). Edition size: 1/1.:cool:
poortvanmoria27.jpg
 
That is absolutely amazing. What beautiful craftmanship. You should be very proud...that is a piece any LOTR fan would love to have in their collection and to think that you made it! :rock :rock Bravo!!! :bow
 
Man !!! I always wanted to have stone sculpt skills !! You did a terrific work here.

Thanks. I didn't know I had it in me, until I just tried it at first. And I found out I liked it and I'm good at it as well, hehe. Sometimes you just need to try something before you know you're any good.
 
Thanks. I didn't know I had it in me, until I just tried it at first. And I found out I liked it and I'm good at it as well, hehe. Sometimes you just need to try something before you know you're any good.

I couldn't agree more with this statement and yes, you ARE good at it. Keep it up! It looks fantastic!
 
I can only imagine what it must feel like to be able to sit down and make something so incredible appear from a stone. Beautiful work.
 
Outstanding work matey. You should think about going pro, there has to be a market for work like that.
 
Outstanding work matey. You should think about going pro, there has to be a market for work like that.

Thanks for the compliment. However, going pro isn't what I'm looking to do. For instance, the Gates of Moria was about 40 hours of work. If you have to make a living, you'd have to charge people approx. $ 600 (40 hours times $15 an hour) for this piece. There's nobody that's gonna buy it for that price. :lol

That's why I keep it as a hobby and keep the things I make for myself. There's not a day that goes by without me enjoying my sculpt, and I'm sure it won't be any different once the Argonath are finished :cool:
 
Given the amount of time and effort id get this thing in a studio of some descript and get it lit and photographed professionally. Realise that would just be for our benefits as you get the real thing but given the amout of work thats gone into it. Id be showing it off
 
Given the amount of time and effort id get this thing in a studio of some descript and get it lit and photographed professionally. Realise that would just be for our benefits as you get the real thing but given the amout of work thats gone into it. Id be showing it off

Haha, thanks for the tip. I'll be sure to make some good pictures of it myself tho. With my "simple" digital camera and some "home made" lighting (a lightbulb and opening the curtains on the other side :D), I'm capable of making some very nice pictures. If you don't believe me, just check my site :cool:

And for the ones who don't think pictures do the thing justice... feel free to come over ;)
 
Amazing work. I tried to carve stone once-I picked up a stone and then said nah! Wish I had the time.
 
If you have to make a living, you'd have to charge people approx. $ 600 (40 hours times $15 an hour) for this piece. There's nobody that's gonna buy it for that price. :lol

I don't know, people pay pretty insane prices for custom and one of a kind items. If you keep at it and spread the word around you could probably make some scratch out of commision work. I once spent $300 on a statue at an arts and crafts show just because I loved the piece and enjoyed talking to the artist about his work.
 
I don't know, people pay pretty insane prices for custom and one of a kind items. If you keep at it and spread the word around you could probably make some scratch out of commision work. I once spent $300 on a statue at an arts and crafts show just because I loved the piece and enjoyed talking to the artist about his work.

Thanks for the tip. I'll think about it. However, the Argonath will stay in my posession for at least a couple of years, I'll probably be too proud of them to sell them :D
 
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