The eggs needed to be waterproof to protect the hardware inside. They also had to have the right coloring and feel. For those finishing touches, Williams-Guillén reached out to Wilde, the Hollywood artist, for help. Wilde usually creates special effects for movies and television, but she was eager to take on a new challenge. “I thought the project was amazing and wanted to help out,” she says.
Wilde immediately ran into a problem, though: She had never seen a sea turtle egg in real life. She visited the Los Angeles Zoo to look at land turtle eggs, but they had hard shells. Wilde finally found a land turtle egg that was leathery like a sea turtle’s. “I used it as a reference,” she says. Following the example, Wilde sanded the outside of Williams-Guillén’s plastic egg to make it smooth. Then she applied different coats of paint for the right color, a yellowy off-white, and added glue to the paint to make the egg waterproof.