Very classy. Well done.Very happy with my European mounts that were done in Africa.
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I’m sure members on here can give you dimensions on skulls, just tell us what animals are on your list and someone here will get you the dimensions.As usual, I'm putting the "plaque before the first Botswana trip". But, I have come into a quantity of blue pine lumber of various sizes and want to make a plaque in the shape of Africa to mount skulls from kudu and gemsbok. I have seen a few on the internet which look pretty nice, but no dimensions were given. Given average animal skulls, does anyone have some good ideas as to dimensions for the plaques? Thanks in advance for the help -
Thank you - Those measurements are much smaller than I would have expected. Probably will wait until I (hopefully) have animals on the ground before starting the woodwork.Kudu 43x18 cm
Gemsbok 40x15 cm
I can make one of these mounts in a little more than an hour, complete with stain and finish. No material needs to be cut from the skull.A flat sawsall cut makes it much easier and quicker to mount securely to the plaque. Leaving the complete upper skull intact with teeth requires custom fitting and time with each mounting being unique.
A flat sawsall cut makes it much easier and quicker to mount securely to the plaque. Leaving the complete upper skull intact with teeth requires custom fitting and time with each mounting being unique.
Here is a pic of a little "last day/last afternoon pronghorn I took many years ago. This "Euro" mount was done by a friend who was a hobby taxidermist. He does his mounts with the intact skull unless the customer wants something different.I can make one of these mounts in a little more than an hour, complete with stain and finish. No material needs to be cut from the skull.
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I have never seen a North American euro mount with lower jaw except critters with canine teeth.
Excellent info, would never have thought about “painting” to cover mistakes!I had skulls and four hides done from eleven animals shot in South Africa last August. Still sitting in a crate at taxidermist in Port Elizabeth. They were finished in the spring and I was sent photos of excellent work. The holdup seems to be govt paperwork delayed. According to taxidermist email today, that govt dept has undergone "drastic changes" recently. Not surprised. Seems anything associated with govt there is always in flux. Exchange rate has been improving so the delay has had some benefit.
Make sure you tell taxidermist to not paint the skulls. I had that happen with first batch. Cleaned them up but it was a messy job. They paint them to cover up sloppy work, particularly grease stains. A taxidermist on this side can clean up grease stains easier than stripping off paint. I have sixteen skulls on the wall now. Only one, the above hartbeest, was ready to hang out of the crate.
Oh yes. I have seen several skull mounts in Africa that are painted. My buddy's first two shipments were all painted white. Looking closely at some of the pics posted here and elsewhere in other threads, I see it is apparently not uncommon.Excellent info, would never have thought about “painting” to cover mistakes!
... and want to make a plaque in the shape of Africa to mount skulls from kudu and gemsbok. I have seen a few on the internet which look pretty nice, but no dimensions were given. Given average animal skulls, does anyone have some good ideas as to dimensions for the plaques?