Make and Paint Realistic Medieval Stones From Styrofoam
Вставка
- Опубліковано 3 лип 2024
- How to make miniature stones from XPS Foam. Stone walls and tiles for wargaming terrain, d&d scenery, warhammer 40k, tabletop gaming, scale models, dioramas, model railroads, and dollhouses. Insulation foam, XPS Foam, and Styrodur are excellent materials for creating miniature stones, bricks, walls, roads, and props!
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I used golden acrylic paints and vallejo acrylic paints in this video!
Chapters:
0:00 Intro
0:11 Carving XPS Foam
1:08 Painting Miniature Stones with Acrylic Paint
1:39 Adding Spackle to Fill Gaps
1:55 Weathering with Acrylic Washes
3:09 Final Result!
3:26 Patreon
3:47 Bloopers
Music:
Song: Shine On
Music by: CreatorMix.com
Song: Full Throttle
Music by: CreatorMix.com - Навчання та стиль
Love the coloring - so simple! Thank you for this tutorial! 🙂
Thank you so much!!
WOW; NICE IDEA
THANK YOU👋👋👋
Thank you!!
Another great tutorial!
Thank you!!!
But honestly AMAZING tutorial again!!!
Thank you so much!!!
Danggg I wonder how long it will take for me to veneer my bedroom wall with mini stones
Haha probably too long but it would be worth it!
That was a excellent tutorial sir, I have seem other 'lessons' like this on YT, but your was anothe take on the subject, thanks for sharing, bext regards from Australia 👍👍👍👍
Thank you!!
👌👌👌👌👌👌
How would I do yellow limestone?
Hi there, I’d stick to using a light tan basecoat, maybe a color like buff. Then, I’d mix that color with white and drybrush the raised texture
After each step of wash, like the yellows and such do you wipe the excess off then add a different color or each shade let dry?
I don’t wipe off any excess typically because I make sure the colors are very diluted so the effect dries a lot less vibrant than when it is wet.
When I did the overall wash of buff and yellow ochre over all the stones, I let that dry before painting the individual stones. I hope this helps!!
Too much yellowish
You really flipped the script on this one!! Pretty cool. Gary from C t. U.A.
Thank you!!
I’ve never seen yellow mortar joints in medieval stone walls. What was your inspiration to do this?
@@randyftz I found my reference online from a medieval building in Dinan, France