I had some cutoff horns on a nice buck i killed 6-7 years ago and a skull I had leftover from an old buck I had mounted. Been meaning for years to try and merge them together and finally got around to it the other day
Forgot to take pics before I started so that blob of goop in the head is bondo
I used bondo and a wooden block to hold it in place, but the Bondo was way harder to trim and smooth than I thought. Not finished but it came out ok. Prolly be another few yrs before I get it smooth
Frankenstein Euro Project
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- Mountain Man
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Re: Frankenstein Euro Project
After Bondo kicks it's kind of "rubbery" for a few minutes. That's the time to trim any rough spots. I use a utility knife to trim Bondo before it completely hardens.
Even if you trim a little too much, it's easier to fill in that space later than to remove excess hardened Bondo with a file, sand paper, sanding drum on a Dremel, etc.
Even if you trim a little too much, it's easier to fill in that space later than to remove excess hardened Bondo with a file, sand paper, sanding drum on a Dremel, etc.
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