JORGE BENLLOCH: This is Jorge Benlloch in behalf of Expert Village. Now, I'm going to try to introduce you to how to make a dolphin mural with clay, wet clay, self-drying clay. These two clays, they are not self drying clay, always I put there because you can use whatever you want. You can use Sculpey, you can use plastiline, but always I prefer the gray clay; it's less dirty and dries a little faster, dries in four or five days. Then we're going to make a family dolphin jumping mural. We are going to make it like half of it like a bas-relief, and then we're going to mount it on this kind of piece of wood or whatever. We're going to do it pieces, that kind of size. And we are going to use this clay. We're going to use a rolling pin. We're going to use those little things and all these tools. This is very important; that's I always use that one in order to cut the clay. We are going use not exactly those models. I put those models to order to inspire you and inspire myself too. As we say, well, this one was made by native Hawaiians; they are fantastic sculptors. This is a pilot whale; that is a dolphin, in fact. And this is a bottlenose dolphin that I think they sell in the Monterey Aquarium. Look at that. I found this in the beach in here in Malibu. Anyway, I just showed you this because this will help us to shape and to get the movement. Of course, I got some books that also we can copy more or less the movement of the dolphin and all the particular details of the dolphin, and then we see that they are gregarious people and they are family. Animals--they're fantastic mammals, and that's why we are going to put in here. We're going to put like a family of dolphins, like maybe three, maybe four. We'll see how many we can put and shape there that it looks good. After--well, after that, I'm going to start cutting the clay.