Very cool, cup of coffee and a Jimmy Dean bowel watch all the techniques was great. I have not yet done anything with air dry clay as I did not want to put clay in my wife's oven and waiting over night was going to be a pain. Now I see a need for Dehydrator Drying Machine
Oggie, is it me, or was it on purpose? The rock nehind the 'Wizard' looks like a 'Rock Goblin.' Sunken eyes, squashed nose, looking like it is about to wake up and snaffle the Wizard. I like the techniques you showed here and I will likely (at some point) be using your methods to build a hill top to display my 1/48 USAF V-22 Osprey. There is a place over an hour's drive from me to the Welsh coast, to some it is known as the 'Mach Loop.' RAF, USAF and occasionaly some other nations aircraft fly low level through it. I will depict the V-22 going through a part of this area. Thanks for the help.
My Gumby in Space has an air-dry base. Moon craters of course. He is give or take a year old now. His base is cracking. Lots of tiny fissures opening. I think the clay is shrinking. I'm gonna goop it with Mod Podge or something and re-paint. I'm distrusting Sculpey air-dry for the long haul.
@@GPGPapercraftTX will have to keep an eye out for those problems. Havent had any so far. Any recommendations as to a substitute? Thanks for the comment.
Hi, many thanks for this video - very helpful. Something I'm having trouble with is the sort of jagged, craggy landscapes much beloved of 1950's sci-fi art directors. Can't quite get a consistent look. Do you have any hints on how to achieve that effect? 😃
You might just want to try experimenting with the air dry clay. It is pretty easy to sculpt and mold. I'd probably apply it over jagged/ pointed foamular. Thanks for watching.
Great lesson Oggie!! All of the rocks look great!! Thank you.
Very welcome, thanks for your compliments and for watching
Hey Oggie
Very nice tutorials.
Take care😊
@@Tim-57 thanks Tim
Very cool, cup of coffee and a Jimmy Dean bowel watch all the techniques was great. I have not yet done anything with air dry clay as I did not want to put clay in my wife's oven and waiting over night was going to be a pain. Now I see a need for Dehydrator Drying Machine
Thanks so much and yes...the dehydrator has really been a huge help.
Great Class Oggie. Got over to the Art Show this morning at Comicon , was really nice to see your Fantastic Work in person.
@@franco3584 thanks so much for saying hi. Really appreciate it. Great to meet you in person as well
Thank you for the tutorial! I've been wanting to try out that air dry clay sometime. You're always very good at making these dioramas.
You're very welcome and I appreciate your kind compliments. Thanks
Perfect tutorial Oggie, thanks
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks so much
Oggie, is it me, or was it on purpose? The rock nehind the 'Wizard' looks like a 'Rock Goblin.' Sunken eyes, squashed nose, looking like it is about to wake up and snaffle the Wizard. I like the techniques you showed here and I will likely (at some point) be using your methods to build a hill top to display my 1/48 USAF V-22 Osprey. There is a place over an hour's drive from me to the Welsh coast, to some it is known as the 'Mach Loop.' RAF, USAF and occasionaly some other nations aircraft fly low level through it. I will depict the V-22 going through a part of this area. Thanks for the help.
@@BobH809 lol….i’ll have to take a look. I actually didnt plan on them looking like anything. Thanks for watching
Yep that rock has a face
Looking good
Thanks 👍
My Gumby in Space has an air-dry base. Moon craters of course. He is give or take a year old now. His base is cracking. Lots of tiny fissures opening. I think the clay is shrinking. I'm gonna goop it with Mod Podge or something and re-paint. I'm distrusting Sculpey air-dry for the long haul.
@@GPGPapercraftTX will have to keep an eye out for those problems. Havent had any so far. Any recommendations as to a substitute? Thanks for the comment.
Excellent video. Who else see’s creepy faces in the rock formations….
Lol....that's hilarious and certainly unintentional Lol. Thanks for watching
Hi, many thanks for this video - very helpful. Something I'm having trouble with is the sort of jagged, craggy landscapes much beloved of 1950's sci-fi art directors. Can't quite get a consistent look. Do you have any hints on how to achieve that effect? 😃
You might just want to try experimenting with the air dry clay. It is pretty easy to sculpt and mold. I'd probably apply it over jagged/ pointed foamular. Thanks for watching.
@@InterstellarModeler Thanks for that thought.