Back in the day CDs were the rage for bases thanks to AOL. Flat, thin, don't warp, free and laying on the ground sometimes by free newspaper stands. I'd break them sometimes and use the randomness of the sharp edged pieces for rows of bushes/obstacles
Especially these days since CDs are essentially obsolete. I had over 500 CDs collected over the years. Sadly I no longer have a CD player. The CDs are not worth anything to a used record store. So now I've got hundreds of bases for quick and easy terrain pieces. Lol.
Came out great 😊
Thanks so much!
Back in the day CDs were the rage for bases thanks to AOL. Flat, thin, don't warp, free and laying on the ground sometimes by free newspaper stands. I'd break them sometimes and use the randomness of the sharp edged pieces for rows of bushes/obstacles
Especially these days since CDs are essentially obsolete. I had over 500 CDs collected over the years. Sadly I no longer have a CD player. The CDs are not worth anything to a used record store. So now I've got hundreds of bases for quick and easy terrain pieces. Lol.
@@immersiveterrain Same story.. Over 500 collected music CDs all now can fit on 0ne drive and I don't even listen to them.
Right!?
I used to used them as small paint palettes. Still have a few kicking around my paint desk.