Thanks for watching! Without everyone who come and spend their time listening to my special brand of insanity, I would just be having a conversation with a camera! :)
Perhaps just call that prop a "Chandelabra" or a "Candelier" LOL... Great tutorial I hope to see more on your channel, just found you... Are you familiar with Van Oaks Props? lots of good stuff there... he just made a different style candelabra from PVC and hot glue.
Hey Ray! Oh gosh did I keep on mixing up what I was calling the thing as I worked on it, when I was editing it I just laughed. Van Oaks is an awesome maker, I really liked his rooftop leering skeleton. I always find it enjoyable how different makers can tackle the same prop and come up with completely different builds! Thanks for watching and glad you found my little corner of the inter webs! 😀
Hey Teenhype! I will admit, I have started on the 3d printed plan for the candelabra, but it is currently sitting in my "To do" list to finish. Maybe I will make a point of finishing it in the next week! It's always a balancing act of traditional pro-building and 3d prop building videos, watch for a really cool 3d printed knife switch this week! Thanks for watching :)
@@SamhainPropworks its a woodworking trick.. Youll still get tear out mid hole with this type of foam so tune for the best speed once the hole starts..too fast, itll melt..too slow, itll glob up up with tear out
@@SamhainPropworks glad it worked out. Forster bits are not all the same profile so carefully when doing this. The ones that have a jagged edge on the circumference don't leave a good surface. Do it with the razor edge type ones. It's actually cutting the wood fibers so when the cut itself is made, it won't rip the fibers out.
Awesome! Looks slick! Should try something with that pitted metal everywhere. :)
Oddly enough that was my thought too, would be a great way to make aged iron shackles look authentic as heck! Thanks for watching 😊
Well this is awesome, thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching! Without everyone who come and spend their time listening to my special brand of insanity, I would just be having a conversation with a camera! :)
Perhaps just call that prop a "Chandelabra" or a "Candelier" LOL... Great tutorial I hope to see more on your channel, just found you... Are you familiar with Van Oaks Props? lots of good stuff there... he just made a different style candelabra from PVC and hot glue.
Hey Ray! Oh gosh did I keep on mixing up what I was calling the thing as I worked on it, when I was editing it I just laughed. Van Oaks is an awesome maker, I really liked his rooftop leering skeleton. I always find it enjoyable how different makers can tackle the same prop and come up with completely different builds! Thanks for watching and glad you found my little corner of the inter webs! 😀
Any plans to release this as a 3D print project? (like the torches)
Hey Teenhype! I will admit, I have started on the 3d printed plan for the candelabra, but it is currently sitting in my "To do" list to finish. Maybe I will make a point of finishing it in the next week! It's always a balancing act of traditional pro-building and 3d prop building videos, watch for a really cool 3d printed knife switch this week! Thanks for watching :)
run the forstner bit backwards to start..then itll be fine
Oh what a great idea, I had never thought about doing that to start! Thanks Alchemist :)
@@SamhainPropworks its a woodworking trick.. Youll still get tear out mid hole with this type of foam so tune for the best speed once the hole starts..too fast, itll melt..too slow, itll glob up up with tear out
Just wanted to let you know I do this trick all the time now and it is great, thank you for the tip again!
@@SamhainPropworks glad it worked out. Forster bits are not all the same profile so carefully when doing this. The ones that have a jagged edge on the circumference don't leave a good surface. Do it with the razor edge type ones. It's actually cutting the wood fibers so when the cut itself is made, it won't rip the fibers out.