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DEB HUGLIN VOGEL: Hi, I'm Debbie "The Roboteer," and I'm here for Expert Village. I'm working
on a wire sculpture the way Sandy Calder taught me where it's all one piece of wire. And it's
going to have lots of kinetic energy and tensile strength, which means it will be able to move,
sort of like a giant safety pin. So far, we twisted the wire to make the lizard's head
and twisted a couple of places to make his eyes. We've made his neck. It's about the
same size of his head. And now we're going to make a shoulder and his first leg. His
shoulder, like our shoulder, is about the size of his head. We'll give it a little bend,
and then we're going to want his legs to be about twice his head size. So he's going to
have his elbow right there. So this is his neck, his shoulder and his leg. Now, we want
nice lizard fingers that are really long and spindly. So we want a needle-nose plier, and
we're going to make a bend here and we're going to make really long lizard toes.
And then lizards usually have a little thing in the back there that holds the lumps so
we're going to make another little one back to back. Okay, so there's a lizard foot and we want
to fix this so that we can twist up the leg. So if you can see the toes here, then we want
to twist this. You started with a twist there but then we want to twist the body and not
the wires so the wire doesn't get all unravelled. And we're going to carefully wrap the lizard
legs.