6. From this point onward, I lay the textured sheets on in segments, beginning with a 1/2 section. Because this is the left side of the shoe (with the right edge unfinished), I'm using the left side of textured sheet. Ah, the joy of tilable images. The tools I use to marry the seams are a Woodson 3 dental instrument for blending and trimming, a ball stylus for defining the grooves between the scales and a brush dipped in diluent to smooth out those grooves.

7. At this point, matching and marrying the seams is best done with smaller segments, easier to apply. A small segment has just been laid in place near the heel, chosen from a scrap that is close, but not an exact match. What matters most is the grain. Note the small scales in the foreground? They come in handy when marrying and concealing the seams; that process sometimes destroys a scale or two. Goudge out a scale sized area and press a new scale in place.
