The final product that I used was black "3mm Nylon Coated Round" elastic cord. I might have been able to get away with using 2mm, but this had a similar vibe to the original elastic and didn't feel cheap.
FANTASTIC!!!! I didn't notice that you made a tutorial on repairing the legs for these figures. Thank you very much for the video. Now I will get going on repairing my figures.
awesome video, Question....what size elastic cord are you using?
The final product that I used was black "3mm Nylon Coated Round" elastic cord. I might have been able to get away with using 2mm, but this had a similar vibe to the original elastic and didn't feel cheap.
I bought some black corded elastic last night but it looks kinda wimpy and I'd like it to be pretty strong. Thanks!!
@@timnmarylinder If you can find 3mm online, it's the way to go.
Thank you so much for sharing this! I got a bunch of loose knockoff figs that are in desperate need of this repair.
FANTASTIC!!!! I didn't notice that you made a tutorial on repairing the legs for these figures. Thank you very much for the video. Now I will get going on repairing my figures.
Literally my favourite channel on youtube, hope you are doing well and thanks for all these vids, very rewatchable!!!!
Yay! I'm super happy to see you again! Also, this is a SUPER useful tutorial. Thank you so so much!
Good tutorial
I feel like some right angled tweezers might fit under the rivet enough to grab the elastic and pull it through.
For the skinny elastic, any type of tweezers would have been great.
A new BTB Video! It's a Modestly Post-Christmas Miracle!
It's one of the few YT channels that I actually set notifications for.
Good stuff as usual!!!
Nice! Need to try that. I have Done like you did with the thicker one but with 10mm O-ring.
The problem with an o ring is that the material will stain the figure and tend to make the legs flip out.