Use number 57 : using a flame, melt the sprues into many thin strings. Longer sprues work better for this. Now melt the ends of the smaller strings and make sure they melt together. Now repeat those previous steps until you’ve exhausted your entire supply of sprues and you have a very long string of plastic or a decently sized roll of string. Now you knit the sweater. Once you’re done with that, you’re officially one of the only people with a sweater made of GW plastic and has the ability to be able to say that at tournaments you can legally take off your shirt and blind your enemies with it without repercussions. It’s a foolproof strategy
Miniature Hobbyist don’t have enough sprues for that? Then go for something smaller like a wrist band or a necklace. I’ll leave it up to your imagination how those will be used for tournament play.
No joke though: you can use plastic bags to weave them together. You pull the bag through its handles after weaving them with another bag. Eventually you'll have a "rope" of plastic. You can then do anything you'd do with rope. I had a small rug made of plastic bags for a while. The plastic insulates heat so you can use them for making clothes or blankets. Generally it's not something you'd do, but if you find yourself in a disaster or homeless and need to weave together something that's water resistant and holds heat, this technique can be used in a pinch.
There was once an absolute madlad that made an necron army out of sprue bits and best thing is, by technicality the "models" were made 100% out of GW plastic, so they were tourney viable.
Idk how youd do this exactly, but a good sanding to the base before painting it could really help soften those cobblestonesup a bit. Good luck comrade with those marines!
it's also the excuse me and a friend came up with for a dreadnought doublenought. Orks saw a dreadnought, went "I do believe that this dreadnought is not in possession of enough Dakka, and then glued 2 dreads together. so when the dread was salvaged by a desperate chapter (celestial lions), they actually got their techmarines to make it less heretical more good, although it does require 2 pilots due to having 2 clashing machine spirits.
Asks for everyone to send in extra sprue they don't want Two months later: Hey everyone! Today I'm going to show you how to make an actual house out of all the sprue you guys sent in.
I used sprues to make the framework for a Plagueclaw Catapult for my Skaven, along with the Plagueclaw and slime from the Warp Lightning Cannon kit as the ammunition, the Censer from the Screaming Bell kit as a counterweight and the Plague Monks holding the rope from the same kit as the crew! That aside, thanks for sharing these ways to make use of sprue bits, I never even thought of such simple applications for them!
From this i was thinking of twisting 3 of them into a rope and then you have a flexible plastic rope you can put on your miniature or as a decoration or whatever
If you have a 3d printer, pop it on and tell it to extrude plastic as if loading in new filament. The resulting 0.4mm plastic filament strand can be harvested, molded to shape, and within about 30 seconds will be hard and retain its shape forever.
For the "brick wall" and "stone" surface I would add a bit grainy filler in between the "stones" or "bricks" to represent the mortar that binds them together. Also this list is missing a "sprue goo": take leftovers of the thin plastic cement (like Tamiya extra thin) and throw some of those sprues into the container with it and leave it there for few hours. The resulting stuff is a good putty you can use either to create more of "ugly" stuff for Nurgle or use it as a filler. Advantage of using this as a filler is that it is going to sand as the rest of the model so you have a bit better control over the sanding unlike lot of other putties.
I have an old antique hand crank meat grinder, I run the sprues through it and it turns them into the prefect rubble for terrain. The more times you run them threw it the smaller they get so you can sift your pieces out to whatever size you want. I've never paid to base any of the terrain pieces I've built and they look fantastic.
I have used sprue for brick walls/debris, but, using smaller bits for cobblestone was not something that previously entered my mind so that one is going on the project board as well as using that to create a texture roller for cobblestone roads. I have seen the building frame usage recently for creation of Necromunda Underhive terrain in images on Pinterest so that was something I was aware of. The tank traps were also something I have made previously but your string of plastic would make for excellent barbed-wire additives between these traps if coiled while cooling and then having barbs or razors made from bits of plastic sprue afterward. I am opposed to using open flame for softening plastic though and I would recommend acquiring an inexpensive heat gun for such things, use of gloves to prevent burning of fingers and not doing such things if you are not an adult or do not have adult assistance or supervision, even if you are an adult it is a good idea to have someone around to render first aid should you injure yourself. Plastic can also be softened for bending or stretching by submerging it in boiling water. Not condemning your work or your channel just mentioning these things that I am sure you would advocate as well. I loved the ladder idea and thing this is also a really awesome way to perhaps create stairs. I have used sprue to create Bretonnian barricades before but I like how yours looked and yours definitely had the versatility to have been painted in wood colours to make a more Fantasy World looking barricade. Great video and I will be employing some of these ideas for my own creations.
Love it. Assumed most of the list would be stuff i do already or just look bad. I can happily say most of these i never would have thought of and is an extremely creative way to use them with a great result. Thanks for taking the time to make this.
For the last one I was very confused, the expression on my face would have been priceless to see. But when unveiled, a very loud bellowing chuckle erupted. Deffo gonna try out those barricades :D thanks for the tips mate!
Two easy terrain bits: * Rubble: Glue together cut up sprues in a pile. I use them in Gloomhaven for rock obstacles. They need a flat top. * Water bridges: Similar to buildings. Use the sprues as a frame and glue on popsicle sticks. Necessary in the Ghosts of the Archipelago miniatures skirmish game to connect islands over water. Much easier than trying to find bridges of different sizes.
Personally I cut them up into rough pieces, then prime them. Makes for a really good bit of spare material to practice your painting techniques on, such as gradients or edge highlighting.
Sprues, that's a new word for me. Love the creative reinventions. This is the first of your videos I watched. It won't be the last, subscribed. Glad I stumbled across this.
I tend to use mine to help stir paint pots, or as a scraper. Also been known to use them in my garden to help protect little plants and make a little trellis for climbing beans. :)
I accually did one of the tank barricades before I even painted my first mini as a test on how the paints behave. I removed the nobs rather roughly, scraped of any letters and gave them a few scratches and notches... And I was surprised that lead belcher and tons of nuln oil and agrax earhshade and a little bit of dry brushed lead belcher made it look that good. I also like the other ideas. Definitely put them on my list of options to build some cheap terrain
I used to give all my old IG heavy weapons teams small walls/barricades made out of sprues to hide behind. Just recently I made a ramp for my Ridgerunner to jump off for a display base
If you play rank and file then you’ll find that a rank of 5x 20mm bases fit across some sprues very neatly. Trim and stick a piece of card to the back for a movement tray. :)
Marvelous video homie, nice job. I'm 100% doing this. Probably gonna use a darker metallic to give it a grimier look, pleasing my nurgle and ork armies :D
I make my own bitz with them! ATTENTION!!! Use aceton only in well aired area! 1. Get some silicone and make a form from the wanted bit, e.g. the ad mech symbol / ventilation on the 40k fabrik Alternative get some silicone moulds online (got some frome green stuff world myself) 2. Cut down your sprues to make a granulate (I did try the mixer, didn't end well for the mixer) 3. Put form in air tigth container (I have some glas tupper thing, just make sure it dosn't melt from aceton) 4. Fill form with aceton and put some granulat in (aceton first so you don't get air bubbles on the ground) 5. Keep an eye on it and put some more granulat / aceton in the mould until it's filled as fare as you want 6. Let the mass settle, and air the container if it looks good to you 7. Let the mould rest and air a few days without disturbing it (the aceton in you bit must air out compleatly or it will be soft) 8. Take bitz from mould, clean and size them, and violá: your own bitz
simple and easy can be soo brilliant and being able to adapt little bits of small ideas into biger projects.. the key word for the hobbyest is = SUPPORT!
Some great creativity here, thanks for sharing. Recently saw that one miniature company casts their sprues with a rubble texture so you can cut them up and use them for scenery and basing. I hope that catches on with other companies.
i just got my first set on christmas which was the admech combat patrol, cawl, and a box of skitarii. I built all of them today and yesterday and I used a leftover pointing arm on the right arm of the pilot, and cut one of the connector pieces to angle his arm and turned his head (I used a ranger alpha head, the hoodless one) to face where he's pointing and it looks really nice imo. (also, I'm doing my first ever mini painting tomorrow so wish me luck!!)
I'm a big fan of reusing stuff rather than throwing it out, and I've had my sprues sitting around for a while. This was a great video to find, and I can't wait to see what other uses you come up with for them. I'm currently working on an imperial knight, and I'm going to consider using a "cobblestone" base, but I'm leaning towards a jungle theme.
Did exactly that kind of thing for the base while doing a big chunky Ork - cut up some sprues into long beams, painted them all kinds of metal and made them all grimy and rusty. Beautiful scrap metal and gravel base that turned out to be.
I have been trying to figure out how to do a good looking snowy terrain. That melting bits onto the base is perfect. Melt a bit on, paint it a few shades of white and maybe a little blue ice, attach my figure and then add a dusting of white power to make it look a little fresh. Thank you.
I need an HO scale retaining wall for my railroad...think I found how to build it! Another use for sprue, specifically for the round ones. You can make lengths of pipe from those. Good for flat car loads, refinery piping..the possibilities are endless!
I've been carving my sprues into rounded poles and then carving lines into them to look like wood. Then I use them to make walls/barricades/etc. similar to the Ork wall in this video. The other thing to use sprues for that I haven't seen mentioned is movement trays. Take some thick sheet styrene (aka plasticard) and cut sprues into straight lines. Just glue them to the edges and viola: cheap movement trays/custom bases (flip it over).
thank you sooo much ive been looking for away to make a cobblestone base never in a million year would i have of doing out of the sprues now i can make all my mate jealous of my bases now
I've been trying to figure out how to put delicate bow strings on bows and crossbows. Now I can sit fire to plastic and get what I need. Thanks so much!
Man! What a fantastic video, these look like really fun and useful little builds! I just found your channel today, and i really enjoy all I've seen so far. Kudos buddy!
I love these ideas. I'm in the process of making one of those sprue walls, though I'm doing two rows of brick (instead of one), so that the wall looks a bit thicker and is less see-through.
For me it usually goes 2 ways: Select the best sprue parts to make bricks for terrain and smaller parts for rubble on bases. Use rest, like the parts with etched text on them for testing new primer sprays and protection coats before I put them on my models. As well, I once built a pretty simple sprue stickman out of them and then used it as base/skeleton for air drying clay golem miniature, which surprisingly matches DnD miniature quality.
There is another option for sprue usage that I know of that you didn't list. Now it really only applies if you use plastic cement from a jar with a brush like Tamiya thin cement. When it gets low, and its hard to reach with the brush you can chop up bits of sprue and toss them into the cement untill you have a nice thick sludge of melted sprue (it has a different consistency than when you used acetone) and you can use that sludge as gap filler on models.
I use sprues as pipes on the sides of buildings :) They’ve got a lot of fun bends and stuff and sometimes I just slap a whole sprue onto the side of a wall
I really wish UA-cam existed 20 years ago when I was into 40k. Goddamn, other people’s ingenuity with what I thought was useless plastic is amazing and inspiring
Since you like orks, you should use the thin plastic from melting the sprues to make cigars for your orks, I didn't when I had an ork army and it really adds personality to character and burna boys ect...
Something to try that I have heard of in the past is using heating elements like in old solder melter like mini melting pot. Then melt the plastic and pour it in a mold. In a well ventilated area of course.
Thank you for this great video mate! Some really awesome ideas here! I've been wanting to make use of my spures but I was going for some much sillier ideas. I have a few old loyalist models which i wanted to chaosify, and I used spruce to make a spike rack. Issue with that plan was that it was a ton of work for some very very short spikes.
never thought about the way you made the barricades and the brick wall, that's a good one! with some molding, that's gonna save time for later i think ^^
Great video. Always looking for new ways to enhance my table top collection for 40K and Middle Earth especially as some scenery is ruddy expensive! You have a new sub.
Neat! They also hack up quite nicely into crystals, and you can also reshape them into bottles, flasks or metalwork in the same way you make the stretched sprue wire.
Cobblestones are a great idea....just use plastic glue otherwise the PVA can peel off in one giant piece. Love the brick wall. An ice cream stick covered in cheap filler run over it would give you mortar to fill the holes, and help finish it off. Great paint scheme. #4, making wire, is a long standing one from the WW2 wargaming community...it's a great tip. If you're making an antenna, it's handy to drill a hole in the mini, then just insert it...don't glue it! When it breaks, make a new one, and replace it! Really like the Nurgle base and the Ork barricade...so simple!
The terrain frame is an amazing idea. I'm going to do that. Also, I'm going to be clipping and cleaning some of the sprues up and make a necron out of them.
if you are going to glue your models to the sprues to paint them, i would use super glue as the model will just snap off the plastic cement glue melts the model to the sprue
The nurgle base idea is inspiring me to try making some homemade beasts of nurgle with bigger piles of sprues and spare parts from nurgle kits I've got lying around!
Use number 57 : using a flame, melt the sprues into many thin strings. Longer sprues work better for this. Now melt the ends of the smaller strings and make sure they melt together. Now repeat those previous steps until you’ve exhausted your entire supply of sprues and you have a very long string of plastic or a decently sized roll of string. Now you knit the sweater. Once you’re done with that, you’re officially one of the only people with a sweater made of GW plastic and has the ability to be able to say that at tournaments you can legally take off your shirt and blind your enemies with it without repercussions. It’s a foolproof strategy
LMAO thats just awesome, why didnt I think of that =)
Miniature Hobbyist don’t have enough sprues for that? Then go for something smaller like a wrist band or a necklace. I’ll leave it up to your imagination how those will be used for tournament play.
@@MiniatureHobbyist you can put it on a kid and play him as a titan
Points for creativity.
No joke though: you can use plastic bags to weave them together. You pull the bag through its handles after weaving them with another bag. Eventually you'll have a "rope" of plastic. You can then do anything you'd do with rope. I had a small rug made of plastic bags for a while. The plastic insulates heat so you can use them for making clothes or blankets. Generally it's not something you'd do, but if you find yourself in a disaster or homeless and need to weave together something that's water resistant and holds heat, this technique can be used in a pinch.
There was once an absolute madlad that made an necron army out of sprue bits and best thing is, by technicality the "models" were made 100% out of GW plastic, so they were tourney viable.
Sprucrons are realcrons.
@@seanocd spruecrons probably have better lore than newcrons
@@merganmecdinald yeahh.. i stoped the hobby like 9 years ago and starte again last year and checked out the new lore... It was just bad...
Secondhand Duck yeah the old lore is the best lore!
Nickster p
The Ork barricade looked tasty. The bricks you cut from them can be painted gold for gold bars, treasure in ttrpgs.
#띠앙쉬앙 👈👈 please 🥺
Some of the Stormcast sprues are already gold. So you can recreate the Bond finale from Goldfinger, with even less effort.
@@siasavan3900 get out of here bot
Or maybe a objective point
That cobblestone base is genius I’ll be using that for my marines as they’re from a feudal world
Idk how youd do this exactly, but a good sanding to the base before painting it could really help soften those cobblestonesup a bit. Good luck comrade with those marines!
And don't use PVA glue...it can peel off in a one giant sheet, taking your cobblestones with it. Much better to glue down each one with model glue.
@@auroralee Sandpaper
You could just get a green stuff roller and save yourself hours of time.
@@mmortpo It's good if you're on a really tight budget though.
"I'm making it as though I'm an ork making something" this is my excuse for every crappy diy job I do from now on.
it's also the excuse me and a friend came up with for a dreadnought doublenought. Orks saw a dreadnought, went "I do believe that this dreadnought is not in possession of enough Dakka, and then glued 2 dreads together. so when the dread was salvaged by a desperate chapter (celestial lions), they actually got their techmarines to make it less heretical more good, although it does require 2 pilots due to having 2 clashing machine spirits.
Asks for everyone to send in extra sprue they don't want
Two months later: Hey everyone! Today I'm going to show you how to make an actual house out of all the sprue you guys sent in.
Step 1: Turn it into long string like step #4.
Step 2: Use it in a 3d printer
Step 3: ???
Step 4: Cheap but tournament allowed minies
😉
at that point, just use a filament maker
Eat the sprues
Not with my teeth lol =)
Yeah surprised I didn’t see that
If you don't occasionally put a piece of sprue in your mouth like a belligerent child, are you really doing the hobby right?
They are hard to chew and don't taste very good. Eating is a bad idea
Love me some spruedles
I used sprues to make the framework for a Plagueclaw Catapult for my Skaven, along with the Plagueclaw and slime from the Warp Lightning Cannon kit as the ammunition, the Censer from the Screaming Bell kit as a counterweight and the Plague Monks holding the rope from the same kit as the crew!
That aside, thanks for sharing these ways to make use of sprue bits, I never even thought of such simple applications for them!
The plastic wire is absolutely genius
Yup thats one I will be using a lot of in future builds =)
make great antennas as well
From this i was thinking of twisting 3 of them into a rope and then you have a flexible plastic rope you can put on your miniature or as a decoration or whatever
Great for making replacement pipes that snap off
If you have a 3d printer, pop it on and tell it to extrude plastic as if loading in new filament. The resulting 0.4mm plastic filament strand can be harvested, molded to shape, and within about 30 seconds will be hard and retain its shape forever.
For the "brick wall" and "stone" surface I would add a bit grainy filler in between the "stones" or "bricks" to represent the mortar that binds them together.
Also this list is missing a "sprue goo": take leftovers of the thin plastic cement (like Tamiya extra thin) and throw some of those sprues into the container with it and leave it there for few hours. The resulting stuff is a good putty you can use either to create more of "ugly" stuff for Nurgle or use it as a filler. Advantage of using this as a filler is that it is going to sand as the rest of the model so you have a bit better control over the sanding unlike lot of other putties.
I have an old antique hand crank meat grinder, I run the sprues through it and it turns them into the prefect rubble for terrain. The more times you run them threw it the smaller they get so you can sift your pieces out to whatever size you want. I've never paid to base any of the terrain pieces I've built and they look fantastic.
I have used sprue for brick walls/debris, but, using smaller bits for cobblestone was not something that previously entered my mind so that one is going on the project board as well as using that to create a texture roller for cobblestone roads. I have seen the building frame usage recently for creation of Necromunda Underhive terrain in images on Pinterest so that was something I was aware of. The tank traps were also something I have made previously but your string of plastic would make for excellent barbed-wire additives between these traps if coiled while cooling and then having barbs or razors made from bits of plastic sprue afterward. I am opposed to using open flame for softening plastic though and I would recommend acquiring an inexpensive heat gun for such things, use of gloves to prevent burning of fingers and not doing such things if you are not an adult or do not have adult assistance or supervision, even if you are an adult it is a good idea to have someone around to render first aid should you injure yourself. Plastic can also be softened for bending or stretching by submerging it in boiling water. Not condemning your work or your channel just mentioning these things that I am sure you would advocate as well.
I loved the ladder idea and thing this is also a really awesome way to perhaps create stairs.
I have used sprue to create Bretonnian barricades before but I like how yours looked and yours definitely had the versatility to have been painted in wood colours to make a more Fantasy World looking barricade.
Great video and I will be employing some of these ideas for my own creations.
Another use for sprues: Start a Necron army
If you haven't seen them already, look up Spruecrons
I want nothing but a sprues necron army.
Why not
Love it. Assumed most of the list would be stuff i do already or just look bad. I can happily say most of these i never would have thought of and is an extremely creative way to use them with a great result. Thanks for taking the time to make this.
It’s amazing how much some dry brushing can improve a model
Dry brushing + Washes do WORK for models! Its amazing!
For the last one I was very confused, the expression on my face would have been priceless to see. But when unveiled, a very loud bellowing chuckle erupted. Deffo gonna try out those barricades :D thanks for the tips mate!
Sprues are perfect for anything orky and do not bother taking out the small parts, the spikier the better!
*sprues tremble as MH approaches*
Haha yup, I think they should be at the heart of all scratch/kit bashing =)
Two easy terrain bits:
* Rubble: Glue together cut up sprues in a pile. I use them in Gloomhaven for rock obstacles. They need a flat top.
* Water bridges: Similar to buildings. Use the sprues as a frame and glue on popsicle sticks. Necessary in the Ghosts of the Archipelago miniatures skirmish game to connect islands over water. Much easier than trying to find bridges of different sizes.
Cheers, I might try that bridge one =)
glue them together into approximation of the kidney you sold for that titan so you have something to fill in the space.
I am glad I managed to get in on the ground floor of this channel, I am eagerly looking forward to seeing whats coming next
Thank you so much, its a fun ride for us all =)
I made a few ladders but never thought to cut them in half. Just one of many great tips in this video.
this is awesome, i'm literally just getting into warhammer, i recently bought a starter box and i already knew there could be use to the sprues
I hadn’t thought of those anti-vehicle barricades. That’s a really neat idea that I’ll get started on right away! Thanks for an inspiring video 👍🏼
Personally I cut them up into rough pieces, then prime them. Makes for a really good bit of spare material to practice your painting techniques on, such as gradients or edge highlighting.
Man you just inspired me to use my old sprues to build unique necromunda terrain, Hats off to your creativity!
MH : tank barricades
Me: caltrops. Yes.
Sprues, that's a new word for me. Love the creative reinventions. This is the first of your videos I watched. It won't be the last, subscribed. Glad I stumbled across this.
I tend to use mine to help stir paint pots, or as a scraper. Also been known to use them in my garden to help protect little plants and make a little trellis for climbing beans. :)
#10 Cobblestone bases (Great idea!)
2:07 #9 Simple Wall (Great idea!)
3:30 #8 Small building (Ok ..)
5:28 #7 Anti-tank barricade (Needs more cleaning up but otherwise good idea)
7:30 #6 Simple ladder (Eh...)
8:30 Explaination for why Miniature Hobbyist prefer a the rough and shod look
8:54 #5 Figure holder (Ok...)
9:41 #4 Thin plastic for ariels, antennae, cabling etc (Great idea!)
11:30 #3 Nurgle base (eh...)
11:48 #2 Ork barricade (Alright...)
13:12 #1 LoL
10 ideas in a 15 min video; nicely done! Some excellent take-aways.
P.S. 4 ads?! Ouch : /
I got 6 😩
WOW THIS WAS AMAZING i never even thought of using sprues for all these things thank you so much!
I accually did one of the tank barricades before I even painted my first mini as a test on how the paints behave. I removed the nobs rather roughly, scraped of any letters and gave them a few scratches and notches... And I was surprised that lead belcher and tons of nuln oil and agrax earhshade and a little bit of dry brushed lead belcher made it look that good.
I also like the other ideas. Definitely put them on my list of options to build some cheap terrain
Oh, that dreadful feeling of a tiny bit sticking to your finger.
#띠앙쉬앙 👈👈 click it for a better video
bwahhhhhggggggaaaa
I used to give all my old IG heavy weapons teams small walls/barricades made out of sprues to hide behind.
Just recently I made a ramp for my Ridgerunner to jump off for a display base
Top vid!
"imagination is the only limitation". This is the reason i often get nowhere and my stuff looks rubbish
i'm in love with those cobblestone bases, the anti-tank barricades and that ork wall. Genius!
If you play rank and file then you’ll find that a rank of 5x 20mm bases fit across some sprues very neatly. Trim and stick a piece of card to the back for a movement tray. :)
What a bunch of neat ideas! thanks look forward to seeing the other ideas you have for sprues.
Marvelous video homie, nice job.
I'm 100% doing this. Probably gonna use a darker metallic to give it a grimier look, pleasing my nurgle and ork armies :D
I make my own bitz with them! ATTENTION!!! Use aceton only in well aired area!
1. Get some silicone and make a form from the wanted bit, e.g. the ad mech symbol / ventilation on the 40k fabrik
Alternative get some silicone moulds online (got some frome green stuff world myself)
2. Cut down your sprues to make a granulate (I did try the mixer, didn't end well for the mixer)
3. Put form in air tigth container (I have some glas tupper thing, just make sure it dosn't melt from aceton)
4. Fill form with aceton and put some granulat in (aceton first so you don't get air bubbles on the ground)
5. Keep an eye on it and put some more granulat / aceton in the mould until it's filled as fare as you want
6. Let the mass settle, and air the container if it looks good to you
7. Let the mould rest and air a few days without disturbing it (the aceton in you bit must air out compleatly or it will be soft)
8. Take bitz from mould, clean and size them, and violá: your own bitz
simple and easy can be soo brilliant and being able to adapt little bits of small ideas into biger projects..
the key word for the hobbyest is = SUPPORT!
Some great creativity here, thanks for sharing. Recently saw that one miniature company casts their sprues with a rubble texture so you can cut them up and use them for scenery and basing. I hope that catches on with other companies.
This is really brilliant ! For the cobblestone base perhaps is more apt the classic poly cement, but these ideas are amazing!
Love the barricade ideas. Great job. Will be definitely using this tutorial
i just got my first set on christmas which was the admech combat patrol, cawl, and a box of skitarii. I built all of them today and yesterday and I used a leftover pointing arm on the right arm of the pilot, and cut one of the connector pieces to angle his arm and turned his head (I used a ranger alpha head, the hoodless one) to face where he's pointing and it looks really nice imo. (also, I'm doing my first ever mini painting tomorrow so wish me luck!!)
I'm a big fan of reusing stuff rather than throwing it out, and I've had my sprues sitting around for a while. This was a great video to find, and I can't wait to see what other uses you come up with for them. I'm currently working on an imperial knight, and I'm going to consider using a "cobblestone" base, but I'm leaning towards a jungle theme.
Insanely helpful video! Thank you
I used spruce to make a small cart for a heavy bolter, like a soviet maxim machine gun cart
Love the cobbled floor. Very clever.
Awesome ideas! I really love these uses instead of just throwing away a lot of plastic. The anti-tank barricades look really good!
Did exactly that kind of thing for the base while doing a big chunky Ork - cut up some sprues into long beams, painted them all kinds of metal and made them all grimy and rusty. Beautiful scrap metal and gravel base that turned out to be.
What a superb video.. I would have never have thought to use them as you do!!
this just gave me the idea to use the sprues to make a village with popsicle sticks/coffee stirrers and maybe something for a thatch/leaf/hay roof
I have been trying to figure out how to do a good looking snowy terrain. That melting bits onto the base is perfect. Melt a bit on, paint it a few shades of white and maybe a little blue ice, attach my figure and then add a dusting of white power to make it look a little fresh. Thank you.
I often use the sprues as "support beams" for the magnets when magnetising bigger hollow minis like tanks ork knights.
It's not often a video makes me go: "Oh my God! YES!"
Well done, lol!
I need an HO scale retaining wall for my railroad...think I found how to build it!
Another use for sprue, specifically for the round ones. You can make lengths of pipe from those. Good for flat car loads, refinery piping..the possibilities are endless!
I legit thought he was gonna say to mail the sprues back to Games Workshop as a cheeky troll! Great video my mind is racing with possibilities now.
I've been carving my sprues into rounded poles and then carving lines into them to look like wood. Then I use them to make walls/barricades/etc. similar to the Ork wall in this video. The other thing to use sprues for that I haven't seen mentioned is movement trays. Take some thick sheet styrene (aka plasticard) and cut sprues into straight lines. Just glue them to the edges and viola: cheap movement trays/custom bases (flip it over).
Thanks for showing these ideas, they are good uses for what is otherwise tossed in the trashcan.
The first video I saw from you. Loved everything about it. Can't wait to see more content. Brilliant
I’ve been saving my sprues for this sort of thing. Thanks 🙏
Happy to help!
thank you sooo much ive been looking for away to make a cobblestone base never in a million year would i have of doing out of the sprues now i can make all my mate jealous of my bases now
I've been trying to figure out how to put delicate bow strings on bows and crossbows. Now I can sit fire to plastic and get what I need. Thanks so much!
I only started getting into Warhammer about a week or two ago and at first the whole hobby seems daunting but you make it looks so fun & easy
Man! What a fantastic video, these look like really fun and useful little builds! I just found your channel today, and i really enjoy all I've seen so far. Kudos buddy!
I love these ideas. I'm in the process of making one of those sprue walls, though I'm doing two rows of brick (instead of one), so that the wall looks a bit thicker and is less see-through.
For me it usually goes 2 ways:
Select the best sprue parts to make bricks for terrain and smaller parts for rubble on bases.
Use rest, like the parts with etched text on them for testing new primer sprays and protection coats before I put them on my models.
As well, I once built a pretty simple sprue stickman out of them and then used it as base/skeleton for air drying clay golem miniature, which surprisingly matches DnD miniature quality.
Really been enjoying going through the back catalog, lots of great stuff
Thank you and please watch them all over and over again lol =)
@@MiniatureHobbyist I mean I'm gonna have to to really absorb everything, right? Realtalk, this is GREAT background while kitbashing!
@@DH_413 exactly it doesnt really sink in until the 100th view =)
That first base is brilliant! I am doing this right away, thanks mate!
Take a drink every time he says "Nibbily Nobbiliy bits".
... now I'm drunk hic
There is another option for sprue usage that I know of that you didn't list. Now it really only applies if you use plastic cement from a jar with a brush like Tamiya thin cement. When it gets low, and its hard to reach with the brush you can chop up bits of sprue and toss them into the cement untill you have a nice thick sludge of melted sprue (it has a different consistency than when you used acetone) and you can use that sludge as gap filler on models.
I use sprues as pipes on the sides of buildings :)
They’ve got a lot of fun bends and stuff and sometimes I just slap a whole sprue onto the side of a wall
I really wish UA-cam existed 20 years ago when I was into 40k. Goddamn, other people’s ingenuity with what I thought was useless plastic is amazing and inspiring
Thank you, its fun to see what can be done with rubbish =)
Thank you! Very good ideas! I'm definitely about to try my hand at building some scaffolding.
Damn that cobblestone idea is great. Wish thought of of it! Dozens of sprues just tossed away!
your a big help!
NUMBER 1 IS THE BEST !!! GRZ FOR THE VIDEO!! GREAT IDEAS
Well made video and so friendly, thanks you for making it!
Interesting ideas....must try them out. I recently built a diorama and made rubble out of small bits of sprue.
Great work. Barricade looks good!
Since you like orks, you should use the thin plastic from melting the sprues to make cigars for your orks, I didn't when I had an ork army and it really adds personality to character and burna boys ect...
I used the sprews to make a crystal. You glue four together longways and then cut the edges off and glued it on a base. It looks AMAZING
Something to try that I have heard of in the past is using heating elements like in old solder melter like mini melting pot. Then melt the plastic and pour it in a mold. In a well ventilated area of course.
Thank you for this great video mate! Some really awesome ideas here! I've been wanting to make use of my spures but I was going for some much sillier ideas.
I have a few old loyalist models which i wanted to chaosify, and I used spruce to make a spike rack. Issue with that plan was that it was a ton of work for some very very short spikes.
Extra tip : If you carefully do the string strategy with ear cotton stick, you can get a hollow tube but you must be careful.
never thought about the way you made the barricades and the brick wall, that's a good one! with some molding, that's gonna save time for later i think ^^
Great video. Always looking for new ways to enhance my table top collection for 40K and Middle Earth especially as some scenery is ruddy expensive! You have a new sub.
Neat! They also hack up quite nicely into crystals, and you can also reshape them into bottles, flasks or metalwork in the same way you make the stretched sprue wire.
You sir are a MAD GENIUS! I freaking can't believe I dind think about this. I'm Def gonna use my spruce instead of throwing them away
I watched without sound, so maybe already said this, but you could use the wire for simple barbed wire on terrain or tanks
Cobblestones are a great idea....just use plastic glue otherwise the PVA can peel off in one giant piece.
Love the brick wall. An ice cream stick covered in cheap filler run over it would give you mortar to fill the holes, and help finish it off. Great paint scheme.
#4, making wire, is a long standing one from the WW2 wargaming community...it's a great tip. If you're making an antenna, it's handy to drill a hole in the mini, then just insert it...don't glue it! When it breaks, make a new one, and replace it!
Really like the Nurgle base and the Ork barricade...so simple!
Made number 9 today and it came out awesome! Thank you!
The terrain frame is an amazing idea. I'm going to do that.
Also, I'm going to be clipping and cleaning some of the sprues up and make a necron out of them.
check out midwinter mini's ork terrain from sprues. It's great, and the basic concepts would work for any style.
@@plaidpvcpipe3792 oh sweet
I'm definitely gonna use some of these tips!. I recently started collecting Orks and Deathwatch, gonna make some orkish barricades of bits and sprues
if you are going to glue your models to the sprues to paint them, i would use super glue as the model will just snap off the plastic cement glue melts the model to the sprue
The nurgle base idea is inspiring me to try making some homemade beasts of nurgle with bigger piles of sprues and spare parts from nurgle kits I've got lying around!
Another good use for sprues is for add ons for tanks and vehicles like reactive armor, slat armor or even tusks for hedge wacking
My favorite was the plastic wire. Thank you for that!