That is a really nice sculpt.
Is it any alien we know or your imagination?
Either way, if this was the trial run, I can't wait to see what you do in the future.
You still can use it for a figure. You just have to dremel out a peg hole on the bottom. If you don't have a dremel, you could try a power drill. Fill the hole 1/3 full with something easy to carve like greenstuff and shove your head onto the peg. When cured, carve off the excess greenstuff till the head gets the range of motion you're looking for.
I'll have to try the supersculpey.
The unlimited work time intrigues me .
Thanks, it's just something that I was playing around with, to see how well I could do a head sculpt of an alien like creature.
As for working it on a figure...my fear is, super sculpey needs to be baked to harden, and I'm scared of melting the base figure. I really love how the super sculpey feels, as it's incredibly smooth, almost rubber like, but not tacky like green stuff. I use aves fixit on my figures, but texture wise, it's not as smooth as I'd like it to be while working with it (it's dries very smooth, but it's not the easiest to work with). The problem with fixit, is that I need to let it sit for over half an hour before working with it, but by then, you're workable work time starts to decrease pretty quick. It takes about 4 hours to cure, but well before then, it's already too tough to work with, so it's not so forgiving if you make mistakes. Also, fixit isn't cheap, and because of it's nature, a lot of it ends up getting thrown away.