I had a spare ball of green stuff today and so I used it to try out some ideas. The green stuff was split up and pressed on to small stones. Then I used the retractable pencil to make barnacle bumps and teased out the surrounding putty to look like seaweed. It doesn’t have to be too precise as long as it looks tangled and matted.
Nice and simple with the right tools. I will also be spreading a PVA/ grit mix on the stones to act as smaller limpets etc.
The song of the sea.
Very clever!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful.
ReplyDeleteWell done. It looks great!
ReplyDeleteMost atmospheric work.
ReplyDeleteLooks great! It has always helped me to get actual pictures of nature when making unique terrain pieces. Again good job.
ReplyDeleteNeil
I have just been going through your fantasy entries which seem to fix some of the issues I have around basing. May I ask what size bases you use for infantry and cavalry and do you have a set number of figures to each stand?
ReplyDeleteThanks
Grahame
I use 60mm x60mm bases and tend to put 6 figures on them. I tweak this rule if they’re smaller goblins etc. I also added a seventh Dwarf to my bases because I wanted them to look like a packed shield wall. Six figures just didn’t look crammed enough. I tend to say that each base has 6 wounds. This you can tweak for different games’ like 5 for Oathmark etc.
ReplyDeleteI also use the same size bases for cavalry and put two to three figures on them.
ReplyDelete