I wanted to go through the process of this to familiarize myself with fibreglassing before I did so on the main sculpt, so I did...

Here I put cold-cure silicon on to pick up the detail before adding the thixotropic. The strips around the bottom are to stop the mould collapsing in on itself when held upside-down.

The I added thixotropic gradually to bring it to a gravity-defying consistency, mixing it with my hands (with gloves on). I think I don't need as much silicon around the bottom as I have, cos it's kind've lost the point of the strips here. Mental note!

On this 2-part mould the fibreglass split line can run straight down the centre. I made sure the wall was as close to 90 degrees as possible to the silicon. Because of the nature of silicon, I reinforced the wall with mod-rock to hold it more securely in place. Pete said that I should've made the wall wider, maybe twice as wide.

After everything was in place and tidy, next I released the mould with Mac-wax (a few coats). Once dry, then I applied the gel-coat with a brush. This helps pick up the detail. After ten mins or so, when the gel is tacky to touch I sprinkled and blew chopped strand evenly all over. You have to wait so the strand doesn't sink through.

Once that had hardened off after another 15 minutesish, then I mixed up the polyester resin for the fibre matting. I tore the matting up into smaller shapes (torn edges interlocks better than cut edges) and painted the resin on one side, then stuck it to the mould and painted the other side liberally. I repeated this until I'd done 2 layers all over, and then pressed on some surface tissue which makes a more handleable mould, and painted the final coat of resin on. When the fibreglass had gone 'green' I cut round the edges to tidy it up. Then I did all of this again for the other side, except at first when I took the wall and mod-rock off I cut a split line in the silicone at a right angle to the fibreglass split line. I will open it up on Monday...