Happy Tuesday, clever mortals!
Quick question: where did October go?! EEP.
With Halloween coming at us like a dark horse (heheheh foreshadowing humor), John and I have several builds going at once. We hustled to finish our Doom Buggy for y'all yesterday, though, because this beauty needs her own debut post.
Ready?
Ta-daaa!
This is before we turned on the fog machine, so keep going for more spook-taculor glamour shots.
We modeled our Doom Buggy after a Victorian hansom cab, which looks like this:
This let us A) take some artistic license with the ride's design, and B) re-use Tiny Tim,
our beloved thestral. (Tim
insists on coming out each year to play.)
Plus I've wanted to make a vehicle photo op for years now, because EVERYONE likes climbing into cool vehicles and pretending to drive.
That's just science.
The Buggy is our most expensive Mansion build, because the cost of plywood right now is scarier than our
ghost bride. (It was over $100 for the ply and 2X4s.) All told the Buggy was still less than $200 for everything, though, since we already had the horse. And happily John sold a few things to make room in the garage, so it was an even trade.
We started with a pencil sketch and lots of conversation, since my brain doesn't work in 3D. This makes it an uphill battle for John every project, but eventually we (usually) get there!
The lighter lines are my own mods after we talked through things like head space, safety, and lighting.
What I lack in spatial visualization John has in spades, because that sketch is literally all he used to build the entire Buggy. No measurements, he just... winged it. Boggles my mind, y'all.
He started with this:
Which he then doubled, and then connected the two sides together:
If you're not already impressed with John, please note the TINY SPACE he has to work in.
PHENOMENAL COSMIC POWERS
....iiiittty bitty garage space.
Next he clad everything in plywood:
And at this point we dragged it outside to assess.
We also checked the proportions with Tim and a volunteer driver:
I wasn't wild about the top curve of the buggy, so we cut that down: