Awesome job! I just used the bricks mould and the rolling pin, which I bought around the same time as you! The Coffee was a Salted coldfoam coldbrew (?!) I could only get it in America summer 2018 and I miss that stuff so much!
Amazing! Despite things looking a little rough at the beginning, It turned out fantastic! Also, Astrogranite is always a patrician's choice in base paint.
Did you try out milliput? It has more of the soft clay texture while working with it you were looking for and afterwards it becomes really hard and good to work with, with files and sandpaper - the best thing: it's way cheaper than greenstuff :) All that said, you still did a great job and it was very interesting to see the process and work, that went into it - thank you for this awesome video!!
Damn dude this ended up looking really good! Props for persisting through the uncertain phase. This is a really useful video! As for the green stuff work you did--and I think I'm probably repeating stuff other people have said--I'd recommend cutting your green stuff with milliput because it's cheaper. For the brick moulds you could just go full milliput, but mix some green stuff into it when using the roller or you'll find little bits of milliput clinging on to the rolling pin. (milliput has much more clay-like consistency than green stuff's gummy consistency, so it has a tendency to break of in small, grainy chunks. Mixing in the green stuff makes the putty more cohesive, so you won't get that problem so much). Looking forward to the next video!
Thank you, this is super helpful! I’ve never used miliput but everyone suggests that I give it a go so I’ll buy some and give an update. The brick mold is the trickiest park so hopefully with the miliput being less tacky it’ll work 👌🏼
@@thedrypaintpot Be warned: Milliput is still very sticky. Green stuff world's "Magic Sculpt" is way less sticky, but it's more expensive than milliput. You might be better off even just using an air-drying clay for the bricks. You might have already looked this up too, but if you're using a polymer clay like Fimo, you'll generally need to spend some time conditioning it (basically just kneading it) to get it from that crumbly consistency to something much nicer. Can be a real pain though!
Major paint. I think I should’ve bought the soft version but since I have the professional version, I need a clay press. I appreciate the heads up with miliput, I might have to shop around and try a bunch of different clays to find the right one
Awesome recreation! I love the terrain aspect of mini painting so this was right up my alley!
Thank you! I always loved building bases but I was never any good at it. Super happy with this one though!
Awesome job!
I just used the bricks mould and the rolling pin, which I bought around the same time as you!
The Coffee was a Salted coldfoam coldbrew (?!) I could only get it in America summer 2018 and I miss that stuff so much!
Ahhh the cold brews are to die for, I’m usually a macchiato man myself. Let me know how the brick molds work out for you!
Amazing! Despite things looking a little rough at the beginning, It turned out fantastic! Also, Astrogranite is always a patrician's choice in base paint.
Astrogranite is pure gold, always the go to
Loved the vid, just a suggestion, you could try using monster clay melted, and then pour it in, not sure if it would work but just an idea.
That’s a great idea! Never tried monster clay but I’ll grab some and give it a shot 👍🏻
Did you try out milliput? It has more of the soft clay texture while working with it you were looking for and afterwards it becomes really hard and good to work with, with files and sandpaper - the best thing: it's way cheaper than greenstuff :)
All that said, you still did a great job and it was very interesting to see the process and work, that went into it - thank you for this awesome video!!
That’s exactly what I’m looking for! I actually haven’t tried it because I don’t own any but I’ll have to buy a pack and give it a shot 😁thanks!
Damn dude this ended up looking really good! Props for persisting through the uncertain phase. This is a really useful video!
As for the green stuff work you did--and I think I'm probably repeating stuff other people have said--I'd recommend cutting your green stuff with milliput because it's cheaper. For the brick moulds you could just go full milliput, but mix some green stuff into it when using the roller or you'll find little bits of milliput clinging on to the rolling pin. (milliput has much more clay-like consistency than green stuff's gummy consistency, so it has a tendency to break of in small, grainy chunks. Mixing in the green stuff makes the putty more cohesive, so you won't get that problem so much). Looking forward to the next video!
Thank you, this is super helpful! I’ve never used miliput but everyone suggests that I give it a go so I’ll buy some and give an update. The brick mold is the trickiest park so hopefully with the miliput being less tacky it’ll work 👌🏼
@@thedrypaintpot Be warned: Milliput is still very sticky. Green stuff world's "Magic Sculpt" is way less sticky, but it's more expensive than milliput. You might be better off even just using an air-drying clay for the bricks. You might have already looked this up too, but if you're using a polymer clay like Fimo, you'll generally need to spend some time conditioning it (basically just kneading it) to get it from that crumbly consistency to something much nicer. Can be a real pain though!
Major paint. I think I should’ve bought the soft version but since I have the professional version, I need a clay press. I appreciate the heads up with miliput, I might have to shop around and try a bunch of different clays to find the right one