Community > Taxidermy & Scoring
Taxidermy advice??
bucklucky:
Everyone covered what I would have said! Definately get those magazines, the subscriptions are expensive but they have great info in them. Its like christmas everytime I get one in the mail :chuckle: I would recomend the Scott Brewer videos, they have some good info on diferent techniques he uses when mounting game but arent really a good beginer video, more for someone who wants to better the work they already do. Hands on is your best bet for learning, and if you can talk a Taxidermist in to letting you be in the way that would be the best way to learn. Another thing that you will learn a bunch from is joining the National Taxidermist Association and traveling to the Taxidermy competitions and going through there seminars. I gaurantee you will learn from them, they are usually put on by some world champion taxidermists. Washington doesnt have anything going on, too much bickering between taxidermists so we had out Taxidermy assosiation fall apart and no one is willing to step up and put it back together again. You would have to go to Oregon or Idaho. Those are some fun Competitions to go to, you will see some awesome work from real Pros to beginers work . You can get questions asked at www.Taxidermy.net also, check it out. Good luck.
Michelle_Nelson:
Kinda hard to add anything to what everyone else has said.
You don't have to go to school to do taxidermy as a carear. Though you can't just decide to pen a buisness tomarrow after you've mounted your first animal. You must be dedicated and motivated enough to improve on your work with every piece you do. Some schools just make it easier. They will teach you the basics. You have to be careful which schools you choose. Some of them are just flat out awful and will teach you bad habits that will take years to break.
I never went to school for taxidermy. I started going over to a freind of my dads shop and watching him work. I picked up enough just from watching to jump into the art. You will never stop learning. Their will always be a critter or a pose that you have never done befor. I buy or borrow any and every taxidery video or DVD I can get my hands on or can afford at the time. I don't care if it's an animal I've done 1000 times. Their is always the chance I will learn something new that will improve my work.
KillBilly:
--- Quote from: biggamehunter on October 29, 2008, 01:53:25 AM ---I was just curious if you guys and gals had any advice on how i should start off doing taxidermy ( any good books? videos?) Ive been wanting to do this since i got out of high school and i cant afford to go to one of the schools. So i guess i could just try and do my own kills and see if any of my buddys would let me do some of their smaller kills. What do you think? Any advice would be much appreciated. thanks
--- End quote ---
Actually, contact Coasthunterjay and ask him what he thinks. He was doing an apprenticeship type of thing up where he lives. He may have some feed back for ya.
Hunting Cowboy:
I have to agree with everything that has been said. The videos are a good starting point, the magazines are great, especially after you've mastered the basics. These do help with some reference pictures as well. But after you've studied and have watched a few instructional videos/DVD's, nothing can help you more than rolling up your sleeves and trying it. Don't expect competition quality results right away though.
Having the right tools and such is also something not to skimp on or underestimate. As you gain more experience and confidence, you can add tools and other educational references. Like anything else, you get out of it what you put into it.
The most helpful thing to me when I was really on a steep learning curve was attending the taxidermy competitions and going to the seminars. I got to know a few taxidermists that I could call when I ran into something I didn't understand.
As the old saying goes........."I can explain it to you but I can't understand it for you." Good luck!
Michelle_Nelson:
--- Quote from: Hunting Cowboy on October 29, 2008, 05:43:14 PM ---"I can explain it to you but I can't understand it for you.
--- End quote ---
I like that quote.
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