OH! I ended here today! I was really surprised on having a 25 minutes video about my work. I've a shitty day (post-birthday depression maybe) and your video really pumped me up! Thank you very much for it, and for using and building my (pretty old) stuff. After a long time I left the paper models (mawwiage and kids, you know) and I'm slowly coming back but for 3D printing scene. Anyway, I don't want to steal your comments section, just wanted to say "thank you" :) Two thumbs up!
Hi Marcos, good to hear from you and I'm glad you enjoyed the video!! Hope you and the family are well, thanks again for the models and you are most welcome ;)
I've just started getting into Papercraft and I've been loving your models. They are so well thought out which makes them much easier to put together than some of the other stuff I tried. I'm getting a 3D printer, but there is just something fantastic about folding and cutting paper.
Anybody who has played Infinity for long enough (N2, maybe beginning of N3) likely has one of these models on their table, or had at some point. And many of us from the N2 era learned to play on tables full of Ikubes. A local club still has a Samsara for their tables. These are all still great for filling a table for extremely cheap.
Thanks for making this video, I was just getting into papercraft and waned to see how these models came out. This is great. I heard that the Samsara was difficult to build and couldn't find the instructions. Any advice for putting it together since the instruction document is missing from the website?
Hi many thanks for the feedback! The Samsara has some weird angles to assemble, but it is not an advanced model by any means. Trust me, there are models out there that are soooooooooooooo much more complex! Send me an email and I will reply with the Samsara Instruction Sheet. Not sure why it isn't on the Topo website any more... ithaquasbane@gmail.com
Is this printed card coz av only built one landing pad but I printed on paper and the reinforcing it from behind with thick card which was a pain getting the reduced size needed to fit
OH! I ended here today! I was really surprised on having a 25 minutes video about my work. I've a shitty day (post-birthday depression maybe) and your video really pumped me up!
Thank you very much for it, and for using and building my (pretty old) stuff.
After a long time I left the paper models (mawwiage and kids, you know) and I'm slowly coming back but for 3D printing scene.
Anyway, I don't want to steal your comments section, just wanted to say "thank you" :)
Two thumbs up!
Hi Marcos, good to hear from you and I'm glad you enjoyed the video!! Hope you and the family are well, thanks again for the models and you are most welcome ;)
I've just started getting into Papercraft and I've been loving your models. They are so well thought out which makes them much easier to put together than some of the other stuff I tried.
I'm getting a 3D printer, but there is just something fantastic about folding and cutting paper.
Dude you're awesome!
Looks to be interesting products . Great video .
Many thanks!
Superb Papercraft models!
Many thanks. Currently prepping for the next one.
Anybody who has played Infinity for long enough (N2, maybe beginning of N3) likely has one of these models on their table, or had at some point. And many of us from the N2 era learned to play on tables full of Ikubes. A local club still has a Samsara for their tables.
These are all still great for filling a table for extremely cheap.
Also for cheap vehicles in Sci-Fi armies!
You could glue a paperclip into the legs to stiffen them up, for the UOT7 Chicharra.
Good idea! Its the bend that's the problem so a little bend in the wire and that should fix the problem. Great idea
I've always loved papercraft models. Thanks for this series!
Many thanks, currently prepping for the next episode ;)
great review, I've seen some of toposolitario's models. very cool trick with the toothpick for a movable turret
No need for anything complex when you are working with papercraft. Simple is always better! Thanks for all the comments
As I am late to the party, what paper do you print them on, they don't look like standard letter paper
For most models I use 230 gsm A4 cardstock. For small models or components I tend to use a slightly thinner A4 cardstock 160 gsm.
@@IthaquasBane Thanks, I will look for something similar here..I'm near Seattle, WA
Hello! Thanks for the informative videos :-). I was wondering, do you apply any sealant to the models? They look so sturdy for just card stock.
Hi Matt, you are most welcome! No sealant applied, just plain old 230gsm cardstock (or 160gsm for very small models)!! 😀
Thanks for making this video, I was just getting into papercraft and waned to see how these models came out. This is great.
I heard that the Samsara was difficult to build and couldn't find the instructions. Any advice for putting it together since the instruction document is missing from the website?
Hi many thanks for the feedback! The Samsara has some weird angles to assemble, but it is not an advanced model by any means. Trust me, there are models out there that are soooooooooooooo much more complex! Send me an email and I will reply with the Samsara Instruction Sheet. Not sure why it isn't on the Topo website any more... ithaquasbane@gmail.com
@@IthaquasBane Thank you, and sent.
Is this printed card coz av only built one landing pad but I printed on paper and the reinforcing it from behind with thick card which was a pain getting the reduced size needed to fit
I normally use 230gsm cardstock. Smaller models use 160gsm. For teeny tiny models I use paper but seek to reinforce somehow