Squat Frog by Sebastion

Squat frog by Sebastion

When I have someone working for me, the first thing I try to get them to be able to do is build a squat frog, per my father’s design of so many, many years ago. From now on, such people will be working a lot smaller than this. Maybe it is not so smart to teach this skill. I had one person who worked for me who stole the design. He learned how to do it, then repeatedly showed his work in none other than the gallery I had been selling my frog sculptures in for years and years. I’m taking action against this. Not a pleasant task.

But anyway, when I have someone work for me, and they have anything to do with “The Frog”, I want them to learn stuff. I want them to learn how to build some frogs. This may be insane. But the truth is, when I’m busy, I do need help with these things. In other words, there is often a tremendous amount of labor in these frogs. So, even if I have someone sign a non-compete statement and that they will not go off and copy what I do and steal my (and my father’s and brother’s) design, I also have to give a lot of attention to who ends up working for me.

I actually have my son, now 21, working some for me, learning how to make-a-duh frog, as I call it. Which I am very excited about. And if I can get him to be excited about it, well, that would be great. He does not yet have the fire in his belly for this work. I cannot blame him. I never did for many years. But now it is all I do. How about that?

This frog, represented here, was made by a nice enough fellow I have had work for me, on and off, Sebastion. I think he’s done a commendable job. It looks rather art deco. Nice. The mouth is a bit wonky. But, that is the beauty of the frog. The wonkiness and funkiness works with the frogginess of the frog design. That, incidentally, is how others have been able to “steal” the design. Cop it or whatever. Because they do not have to have the same skill level as I have to do it. The frog may come out wonky. But that’s…okay, as Al Franken’s Stuart Smalley used to say.

It worked for me. For many, many years my frogs were wonky. And they took a lot longer. I got better and better. The frogs changed. And they continue to evolve and devolve or whatever.

Now you can see that I do not mind saying if someone else made what I am selling and say I made. It is rather a collaborative design. I’m into that. As long as Sebastion doesn’t go around saying that this is his design and his frog… He wouldn’t do that. Would you, Sebastion? No. He wouldn’t do that. Todd did. But he wouldn’t. That’s one reason he works for me. Another is because he can make a squat frog, even if the mouth is a little wonky. Actually, it looks good.

Available or soon to be in the Frog ‘n Froglet SHOP! .

Sebastion’s squat frog
Sebastion’s squat frog

Easter Egg Frogs

Easter Egg frogs

I call them Easter egg frogs because the body looks like an Easter egg, and because I kinda, when I was making these, was putting all my eggs in one basket, and because, well, it happened to be near Easter when I was making these. It is my “production run” little frog, and, well, I got to tell ya, didn’t work out so great.

Now, I love to get in production and be efficient and make more than one frog at a time, but this is ridiculous. Plus, they didn’t turn out so well. I had fashioned a steel egg shape to fold and hammer the copper against. Then I cut open the egg shape, pull it from the form, reattach it. I’m tellin’ ya. It was a process. Plus, when I get it on the form, I have to heat it red hot and hammer it so that the copper conforms to the shape. Cool stuff. Or rather, hot stuff. But… That process has its place. But these did not work out so well, and I made a lot of them.

I wanted to get into production mode. But this was not the way. So I’m offering these guys che-eap. At the Frog ‘n Froglet SHOP! . But you will have to scroll way down. Way down. Because this is not my best work. But it kind of is good work because I took the time and did it and figured things out. So, they are kind of homely. But who doesn’t love a homely frog? Frogs are kind of homely anyway. Oh, now, don’t say that. Well, it’s true. There I go, talking to myself, again.

Anyhoo… I plan on listing every single one of these frogs I made. Because I want to sell them (che-eap). Just because they are homely, they still need a home, and deserve one.

So this is what I get for putting all my eggs into one basket, metaphorically speaking. I did halt production after about a week of slogging through them. And I learned something – besides not putting all my frogs in one basket, or eggs, or frog eggs, etcetera.

Easter Egg squat frog

Homely. And, kinda like grandpa without his dentures. Eh? Wrinkled. I like that. That’s because I was folding and hammering them against a form. It’s a technique. That might be the best thing about them, the wrinkled body.

Now, don’t you appreciate that I will admit, happily admit when something does not go right and a piece does not look good. I will admit it. And I will still sell these (che-eap).

They grow on you.

I even will put different prices on them, because some are better than others. But even those, well, you know: che-eap.

Easter Egg Frog
Easter egg squat frog
Easter Egg Frog
Easter Egg Frog
Easter Egg squat frog