Good stuff as always! A tech ive seen elsewhere is chucking precut "bricks" in a jar of sharp rocks and shaking it about, it will knock down sharp edges on the foam and texture the surfaces of lots of them quickly, might be something to look up for future projects if you want to do that style of flooring/brickworking again :)
i was just coming to comment this exact point. it works surprisingly well. I suggest making loads of couple different sized stantard bricks. tossing around 1/3 in the jar, givin a slight shaking, then 1/3 harder shaking and final 1/3 really heavy shaking. this results a great variety and saves ton of time.
Such an awesome looking scene, it looks fantastic!! I usually use the term "over brushing" for the technique you mentioned. What a fun project, very motivational. Cheers!
amazing work very inspiring as im sketching out my armies on parade board ive found out that sprigs of ivy make great roots if left to dry out just need de-leafing
In your case since it's meant to be an old stone a few cracks or imperfections work great, but with DAS (or really, any air dry clay) the trick is to leave it exposed to air as little as possible even while it's drying, for that, I generally put either a slightly damp cloth or paper napkin over it and leave it to dry like that. It slows the drying process a lot but the result is without cracks or warps, I also successfully used it in a few molds and even to make a few disks for bases. It also really helps to have a solid frame underneath, nothing insane, just some metal wire or curled up aluminum foil.
This looks absolutely great boss! You really have the gift to entertain and make amazing things that will make any game of D&D exciting and loads of fun! As for the brush technique I could be completely wrong but could you be thinking of over brushing? 🤔 I like to paint models but im awful with technique names 😅 "splodge here and a blob there" is more my style 😆
*_Glue meant for boat sails is stronger and much, much cheaper than brand-name glue with a simian as a logo_*
Good stuff as always! A tech ive seen elsewhere is chucking precut "bricks" in a jar of sharp rocks and shaking it about, it will knock down sharp edges on the foam and texture the surfaces of lots of them quickly, might be something to look up for future projects if you want to do that style of flooring/brickworking again :)
i was just coming to comment this exact point. it works surprisingly well. I suggest making loads of couple different sized stantard bricks. tossing around 1/3 in the jar, givin a slight shaking, then 1/3 harder shaking and final 1/3 really heavy shaking. this results a great variety and saves ton of time.
Excellent terrain project
Looks great. The face statue works brilliantly.
Such an awesome looking scene, it looks fantastic!! I usually use the term "over brushing" for the technique you mentioned. What a fun project, very motivational. Cheers!
Great project, love seeing stuff scratch build from foam. The small details just frame the build perfectly.
for small bricks and stuff you can put them in a container, put rocks in, and shake it a bit to get the roughed up look.
Lovely build! I especially like the details like string for vines.
Amazing work.!!!
It looks great! My favorite part is the giant head.
Nice one Jon, that looks awesome! Love what you did with the tree roots.
amazing work very inspiring as im sketching out my armies on parade board ive found out that sprigs of ivy make great roots if left to dry out just need de-leafing
Stay for the walk through, come for the sights!
Very cool!
awesome!
In your case since it's meant to be an old stone a few cracks or imperfections work great, but with DAS (or really, any air dry clay) the trick is to leave it exposed to air as little as possible even while it's drying, for that, I generally put either a slightly damp cloth or paper napkin over it and leave it to dry like that. It slows the drying process a lot but the result is without cracks or warps, I also successfully used it in a few molds and even to make a few disks for bases. It also really helps to have a solid frame underneath, nothing insane, just some metal wire or curled up aluminum foil.
Excelente escenario!!
yaaah awesome! OPR is great, for anyone in canada Wyrd Ones Tabletop can print you any of their models cheep
Looks like you're gluing stone tiles with honey! Really looks like stone.
Nice
Cool
This looks absolutely great boss! You really have the gift to entertain and make amazing things that will make any game of D&D exciting and loads of fun! As for the brush technique I could be completely wrong but could you be thinking of over brushing? 🤔 I like to paint models but im awful with technique names 😅 "splodge here and a blob there" is more my style 😆
Fantastic build! Love how it turned out. Those clear bases on the miniatures are really awesome
I suggest you could build some industrial steampunk terrain. in 1:1200 scale!
swag
Hello
Awesome and again overbrushing lol.
Over brushing. Very satisfying just like dry brushing.