Kimmo
A Fixture
- Joined
- May 30, 2018
- Messages
- 918
I decided one more quick project was in order before I get back to a never-ender. Another from the stash, this time one of Dragon's DAK offerings from a nice set of eating and drinking figures. Some great gear in the set along with a fox, gas stove and a lizard. I opted to go with the standing chap and made a few improvements along with some undercutting, particularly on the shorts and sleeves. The etch is a German insignia set from Aber, worth picking up. The boot laces took forever. The boots needed some scribing and the laces were awful so out came the smallest bit I had and a lot of drilling took place. The easiest way to to do this kind of lacing is the way it is in real life. Be forewarned, it is extremely tedious. To make life more interesting, the laces are in eyelets part way up, then wrapped around studs. Fortunately the upper part is hidden by somewhat large loops and you can't really see that the laces should form tight, neat Xs. I couldn't be bothered remaking them or the loops.
I chopped up a wine cork into "boards" and strips, then tore little bits and super glued them to a stiff backing and whipped up a wall in short order. After fixing everything with more super glue, I trimmed to size and roughed up the whole with a wire brush, sanded and prodded to taste. A light coat of very thin plaster was applied and most of it removed with a moist toothbrush a la tile grout. I removed any excess in grooves that offended my eye and applied my plaster/Celluclay mix for the base and sprinkled ground bark and bits for the dirt then ran heavily thinned PVA over the whole thing. The base proper is foam faced with styrene. Click on photos for full size.




I'm going to try and do this real quick, if I get it primed and base coated today, then the aim is to get it all painted tomorrow.
Kimmo
I chopped up a wine cork into "boards" and strips, then tore little bits and super glued them to a stiff backing and whipped up a wall in short order. After fixing everything with more super glue, I trimmed to size and roughed up the whole with a wire brush, sanded and prodded to taste. A light coat of very thin plaster was applied and most of it removed with a moist toothbrush a la tile grout. I removed any excess in grooves that offended my eye and applied my plaster/Celluclay mix for the base and sprinkled ground bark and bits for the dirt then ran heavily thinned PVA over the whole thing. The base proper is foam faced with styrene. Click on photos for full size.




I'm going to try and do this real quick, if I get it primed and base coated today, then the aim is to get it all painted tomorrow.
Kimmo