Alright, so let me tell you about this one project I got myself into. I’m always tinkering with stuff, right? And I had this display of Toy Story figures, looking a bit dull under the regular room light. I thought, “Needs something special, a little spotlight, maybe something that blends in, looks kinda organic, you know?” And somehow, the working title in my head for this thing ended up being, well, let’s just say it was a “toy story fleshlight” mainly because I was aiming for this sort of flesh-toned, smooth casing for a tiny LED. Sounds a bit odd when you say it out loud, but it made sense in my workshop, at least initially.

Getting Started – The Grand Plan
So, the big idea was to sculpt a custom little holder for an LED, make it look like it belonged in a kid’s room, almost like a piece of a toy itself. I figured, how hard could it be? Get some polymer clay, maybe some flesh-toned paint, a small LED, a battery. Easy peasy. I was all fired up, picturing this perfectly subtle, warm glow on Woody and Buzz.
I went out and gathered my supplies.
- A block of that polymer clay – picked a sort of beige-y, pinkish color. Thought I could mix it up.
- A couple of super small, warm white LEDs.
- Tiny wires, a button battery holder. The whole nine yards for miniature electronics.
- Acrylic paints, including a few shades I thought would make a good “flesh” tone. You know, for that organic, toy-like look I was after.
I spread it all out on my workbench. Felt like a pro. For about five minutes.
The Nitty-Gritty – Where Things Went Sideways
First off, sculpting that clay. Man, I’m no artist. I was trying to make this smooth, curved shape to house the LED, something unobtrusive. What I got looked more like a lumpy potato. A lumpy, slightly off-color potato. I baked it, thinking maybe it’ll look better. It didn’t. It just became a hard, lumpy potato.

Then the painting. Oh boy. Trying to mix that perfect “flesh tone” was a nightmare. It was either too pink, too orange, or just looked… sickly. Nothing like the warm, friendly vibe I was going for. More like something you’d find in a cheap horror movie prop department. I must have painted and repainted that clay spud like five times. Each time, it got worse. The layers were getting thick and uneven.
And the LED part? Getting that tiny thing wired up and then trying to embed it into my lumpy, badly painted creation without making a complete mess… let’s just say my patience was wearing thin. I snapped a couple of those tiny wires. Nearly superglued my fingers together trying to fix the battery holder into the base of the “sculpture.” If you can even call it that.
The Glorious (Not Really) Result
So after a few evenings of faffing about, getting clay under my fingernails and paint on my shirt, what did I have to show for it? Well, I did technically make a light. It lit up. But did it look like the cool, custom piece I imagined for my Toy Story display? Absolutely not. It was this weird, misshapen blob with a light sticking out, painted a color that can only be described as “unfortunate.”
I put it on the shelf, near the figures. Stood back. It didn’t enhance anything. It just looked… weird. Like an alien artifact had landed next to Woody. My wife came in, took one look, and just said, “What… is that?” And she didn’t wait for an answer, just shook her head and walked out. That pretty much summed it up.
In the end, that whole “toy story fleshlight” idea, or rather, my “flesh-toned toy spotlight” project, ended up in the bin. Sometimes, you have these grand visions, and then reality, and your distinct lack of sculpting talent, hits you hard. It was one of those projects that teaches you more about what you can’t do than what you can. But hey, that’s the life of a tinkerer, right? You win some, you make lumpy potatoes some.