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Gather your supplies. Here we have some cotton balls and liquid latex.
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Dip a cotton ball in the liquid latex. You don’t need it sopping wet. Then start to tear it apart into workable pieces.
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Start with clean skin. Spread torn cotton balls on the skin like the perimeter of a laceration. Build up texture, add layers, and have pieces hanging off like hanging bits of flesh.
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Then take a make-up sponge dipped in liquid latex and dab all along the "wound" and skin.
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Next tear apart some face tissue into single ply chunks.
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Add face tissue onto the wet latex to build up and blend in the layers. You could even put rice krispies under the tissues to give it a more crusty, disgusting look.
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Sponge on more liquid latex.
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While it’s still wet, take a spatula and start to open up the center of the "wound." Make nice hanging bits of "flesh" and keep the center of the wound relatively hollow.
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Make nice hanging bits of "flesh" and keep the center of the wound relatively hollow. It's fine to keep some layers in the center to make it appear chunky.
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Then use one more coat of latex to seal everything in. Let it dry thoroughly (you can speed this part up with blow dryer).
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Next seal the latex with a flexible sealer to prepare it for painting. You can't mix oil with latex, so remember to seal it in well so the latex doesn't degrade when we paint.
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Here are some bruise tones you can work with: purples, browns, blacks, yellows, and greens.
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Start with flesh and bruise tones.
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Pro tip: break a sponge in half for a more even paint application.
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Dab the wound with flesh tones, making sure to cover up all traces of cotton ball. Don't just stop at the latex; bring the color around the temple, cheek, and chin to blend it in to your face.
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Start to fill in crevices with darker skin tones.
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Stipple on darker bruise tones now, especially around areas like eyes which naturally bruise easily. It's OK to make it look spotty and blotchy. Use dark blue for severe bruising.
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Now start to fill in the center of the wound with trauma colors, like bright vibrant reds.
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Use darker colors around edges of the wound to create depth.
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When you're done coloring, set the wound with setting powder to prep it for fake blood. Brush it on and blend it in so it doesn't remain visible.
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Now take some "wound filler" which has the consistency of strawberry jam.
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Take a spatula and layer it into the contours of the wound.
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This is good for creating the chunky appearance of dried blood. Don't stop at the face- get the ears as well. Be creative with how far you take it.
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Now take some FX blood, with a drippy consistency, and drip it onto the deepest areas of the wound.
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Try to get some around the lips, dripping down the neck; however you think blood would drip out of a real wound. This may look dramatic, but it looks great in the dark.
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Now spray with just a little bit of water to get some blood to drip down the face.
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